Skip to main content

SolarLite road studs help slash fatalities on one of Britian's most dangerous roads

More than 304 people in the UK are alive today or have avoided the prospect of a lifetime of special care because just 15 roads have had simple improvements put in place, according to this year's tracking survey by the Road Safety Foundation.
February 29, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
More than 304 people in the UK are alive today or have avoided the prospect of a lifetime of special care because just 15 roads have had simple improvements put in place, according to this year's tracking survey by the Road Safety Foundation. On these 15 roads alone, fatal and serious crashes dropped 62 per cent from 494 to 190. Entitled Simple Measures Save Lives, the report shows that elementary safety measures are paying back the costs of investment in an average of 10 weeks. The savings are worth over US$80 million million annually to emergency services, the NHS, local authority care, businesses and families.

This year's most improved road is an 11km section of the A4128 through Buckinghamshire from Great Missenden to High Wycombe. Over the last two surveys, it has moved from one of Britain's highest risk roads to one of the safest. Over this time, fatal and serious collisions dropped by 89 per cent, from 19 to 2.

This non-primary single carriageway A road is a busy route connecting local villages, and carrying high volumes of commuter traffic. Safety measures put in place include some new speed restrictions; and an innovative use of 2696 Astucia SolarLite solar-powered road studs to improve night-time visibility.

Of the UK's 15 most improved roads, almost half are single carriageways, and are spread across the country. Consultation with road authorities on these sections found that common crash types were single vehicles losing control at bends and rear-end collisions at junctions and during busy periods.

Improvements on the 15 roads include:

    •Signing, markings and the design and layout of junctions
    •Speed limit review and the use of speed enforcement
    •Resurfacing, including the use of high-friction, anti-skid treatments on bends
    •Central safety barriers

On these 15 improved routes, Dr Joanne Hill says: "These are practical, largely inexpensive solutions which will pay back the costs of investment in an average of 10 weeks - a 500 per cent rate of return in the first year alone - and go on saving lives and saving money for the nation for many years to come. Much of this remedial work can be done as part of routine maintenance."

To download a PDF of the 98-page report: Saving Lives, Saving Money - The costs and benefits of achieving safe roads, published by the 3375 Road Safety Foundation, click %$Linker: External 0 0 0 oLinkExternal this link 98-page report: Saving Lives, Saving Money - The costs and benefits of achieving safe roads. http://www.roadsafetyfoundation.org/media/11070/saving%20lives_saving%20money.pdf false false%>.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Developments in workzone safety systems
    May 3, 2012
    Raising awareness of safety in highway work zones is a global issue, and various initiatives highlight this as Patrick Smith reports. So seriously is work zone safety taken in the United States that each year since 1999 a special week has been set aside to highlight it. Each year in April, National Work Zone Awareness Week is held to bring national attention to motorist and worker safety and mobility issues in work zones.
  • Developments in workzone safety systems
    February 8, 2012
    Raising awareness of safety in highway work zones is a global issue, and various initiatives highlight this as Patrick Smith reports. So seriously is work zone safety taken in the United States that each year since 1999 a special week has been set aside to highlight it. Each year in April, National Work Zone Awareness Week is held to bring national attention to motorist and worker safety and mobility issues in work zones.
  • Motorcycle-Guardrail Crashes: How can the risk of severe injury and fatality be reduced?
    July 23, 2012
    The problem: motorcyclist fatalities can occur from a variety of accidents. But in the United States in 2005, motorcyclists comprised 42% of fatalities due to guardrail collisions, whereas only 3% of vehicles on the roads were motorcycles (Gabler, 2007). More motorcyclists were killed in guardrail collisions than passengers of any other vehicle type in 2005 (Gabler, 2007). Guardrails cannot simply be removed to protect motorcyclists. However, improvements need to be made in several areas in order to keep mo
  • VIDEO: Car owner’s manual – chapter one, snake removal
    October 26, 2016
    Snakes can get into the darnedest places, such as your car. The issue then becomes how to get it out. The answer is, with a lot of work and care as well as an equal amount of patience, such as possessed by the man in this video shot somewhere possibly in Southeast Asia Getting a small snake out of a car is tough. Getting a large one out is practically impossible - at least extracting the reptile in one piece and alive is.