Skip to main content

Effective signage and road markings boost road safety

Effective signage and the use of roadmarkings in the most effective manner can reduce risks for all road users - Mike Woof writes
February 24, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Highlighting danger spots such as curves can reduce the risk of roadway departures

Effective signage and the use of roadmarkings in the most effective manner can reduce risks for all road users - Mike Woof writes

Correctly placed roadmarkings play a valuable role in guiding road users of all categories; however in some urban environments reducing the risk of confusion can also improve safety. Contrasting approaches to the use of road markings may indeed be appropriate, depending on the application.

Innovative projects in the US and the UK have now been instituted that will boost safety both for drivers and vulnerable road users. In the US a new Technology Partnerships study will evaluate the safety benefits of a solar-powered traffic signage system designed to minimise crashes on horizontal curves. The Sequential Dynamic Curve Warning System has been manufactured by Traffic & Parking Control. This is the first product to undergo a Technology Partnerships safety product performance evaluation.
TAPCO is installing the system in several locations in partnership with transportation departments in Missouri, Texas, Washington State and Wisconsin. The 2410 Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) will contract with an independent research organisation to evaluate the technology for two years. The report will provide performance information on the technology that highway agencies can use to make purchasing and installation decisions.

Safety product performance evaluations assess the effectiveness of innovative road infrastructure safety technologies that are fully developed and market ready, but have had little use on US roads. The FHWA has also provided Technology Partnerships grants to industry to help move late-stage prototypes designed to improve highway quality or safety or reduce construction congestion to the market faster. The Technology Partnerships programme is part of the Highways for LIFE initiative to accelerate innovation use in the highway community.
TAPCO’s system uses LED-illuminated chevrons to provide drivers with advance warning of and guidance through horizontal curves in a bid to reduce the high number of crashes on such road sections. Roadway departure crashes cause 25% of all highway fatalities and this is intended for installation on curves that have higher-than-average crash rates.

Among the benefits that TAPCO cites are the system’s cost-effectiveness, ease of installation and use of solar power, which eliminates electrical installation and operating costs. The company has installed several systems throughout the United States, and preliminary feedback has been positive. The Technology Partnerships study will evaluate the technology’s effectiveness in reducing vehicle speeds and the frequency and severity of curve related crashes.

And in the UK, pedestrian safety in London’s busy Camden area has been dramatically improved by contractor FM 2329 Conway, following the implementation of two innovative traffic calming schemes. Part of Camden’s Naked Streets programme, the work was designed to make Camden High Street and Bloomsbury’s Byng Place safer for the large numbers of pedestrians in the area.

The first scheme of its kind in central London, the Camden High Street work cost €1.72 million. The area sees large numbers of pedestrians, particularly at weekends, due to the presence of the famous market, as well as offices, museums and the Regent’s Canal Greenway Route. But with its busy through-routes for traffic, safety has been a concern.
Improvement works carried out by FM Conway have included widening footways to ensure more room for high flows to pedestrians, narrowing carriageways to reduce traffic speeds and de-cluttered footways through the removal of excess signage and guard railings. The aim has been to allow sufficient pedestrian capacity for weekend peak periods, while improving visibility for drivers.

Similar modifications have been made at Bloomsbury’s Byng Place, which has been revamped into a high quality public space and is now used throughout the day by students, residents and office workers. Home to the University of London and University College London university campuses, Byng Place is heavily used by pedestrians and cyclists but also suffered safety concerns for all road users. The €803,000 improvement included the high quality upgrade of footways and carriageways, new street lights, removal of all vehicle parking and additional cycle parking. An innovative shared space that has no carriageway markings for cyclists or vehicles has been employed, which encourages users to slow down, enabling pedestrians to cross the street safely. Since completion, pedestrian flows have increased by 30% while average traffic speeds have decreased from 32-22km/h, making the square much safer.

The contractor says that the work has enabled both areas to become safer and more attractive environments, and has given pedestrians wider pavements for when there are crowds. Both schemes have been able to demonstrate good value for money while delivering high quality public places which are heavily used by pedestrians and cyclists.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Increase in German car crashes cause for concern
    August 27, 2014
    The fatality rate on Germany’s road network increased in the first half of 2014, compared with the same period last year. The preliminary figures from Germany's Federal Statistics Office, Destatis, show an increase in road deaths of 9.5% to 1,576 for the first six months of 2014. The level of injuries also rose by 10.6% to around 185,600 while the number of crashes in which people were injured rose 11.4% to 144,600. Overall however, the number of crashes dropped by 1.2% to 1.15 million. The reason for the i
  • Roadmarking requirements can boost highway safety for road users
    April 11, 2013
    Road markings are an essential component of a modern infrastructure and an essential contributor to driver comfort and road safety. The COST 331 study, which ran from 1996 to 1999, mainly focused on dry night conditions and indicated that the increased luminance of road markings, results in a better delineation of the road and offers more reaction time for drivers. On average a slight increase in speed was noted, but the increased visibility was mainly converted into more reaction time. IMPROVER, which ran
  • Student invents hologram road signs that ‘pulse’ at drivers
    June 5, 2013
    A British student hopes his new hologram road signs which ‘pulse’ at drivers will lead to a revolution in the way motorists are given information on the roads. Nottingham Trent University (NTU) undergraduate Charles Gale has already obtained a patent for his design and is set to meet with transport officials to discuss how it could be used across the UK.
  • New software makes road marking applications easier
    February 17, 2012
    Equipment, materials and testing combine to offer motorists better road markings as Patrick Smith reports Drivers realise that clear road markings, particularly in darkness and during the wet, are life-savers, offering guidance and direction. Manufacturers of marking materials, in-road studs, and testing and laying equipment have spent years perfecting solutions to make such markings easier to place; easier to see through the use of a variety of materials, and longer lasting. Sophisticated testing equip