Australia In a similar manner to Canada, Italy and the United States, the shoulders located on the side of Australia's highways are normally used as an emergency lane in the case of a breakdown or by emergency vehicles in the case of road congestion. However, no mandatory regulations exist to wear a
high-visibility jacket when dismounting from the vehicle stopped in an emergency lane. A recent study conducted by the National Coroners Information System (NCIS) in Australia has revealed 29 closed case fatalities (and at least a dozen case fatalities still under coronial investigation) that had been reported to Australian coroners where a person was "struck in an emergency lane after their vehicle had stopped" between July 2000 and November 2010.
Canada and the United States The right-hand shoulder is separated by a solid white line, and the left-hand shoulder (if the road is one-way, such as part of a
divided highway) is separated from the leftmost through lane by a solid yellow line. On many roads, the lines are supplemented by reflective
raised pavement markers or
rumble strips to provide additional visual and tactile feedback to drivers crossing the lines. On
freeways in
foggy areas of
California, there is an obvious break in the line of the shoulder before every exit. This is to help drivers find their exits in heavy fog (especially the dangerous
tule fog).
France In France, roadway shoulders are usually wide, or wide when the roadway carries more than 2,000 vehicles per day. The main difference from other European countries is that the white line is dashed, typically long with gaps long. The design is intended to provide a guide for drivers to maintain a safe distance between vehicles. Road signs can be found along motorways, to indicate the safe distance (1 line = too close, 2 lines = safe distance). At some points (tunnel, bridge, narrow road with no shoulder, tight curve) the edge line becomes solid.
Ireland in Ireland, with an unbroken yellow line (that peels away and follows the sliproad) demarcating the hard shoulder. Full-width hard shoulders are provided on most new, upgraded (from the 1980s onwards), and major
national roads in the
Republic of Ireland, especially on
wide two-lane and
dual-carriageway roads (the shoulders on most
2+1 roads are narrow however). They are defined within the official document the
Rules of the Road as a part of the road that should normally only be used by cyclists and pedestrians. Their provision of on interurban routes in the 1970s reportedly resulted in a 50% decrease in accidents involving pedal cyclists. Normally one is not allowed to drive on the shoulder, but in case of traffic blockage, use of the shoulder is allowed to reach an exit if it is within 500 metres.
United Kingdom at Leyton Cross, United Kingdom. Full width hard shoulders are usually provided only on
motorways and are usually wide, but there are exceptions. Some motorways do not have hard shoulders at all (for example the
A57(M) and many
smart motorways where the hard shoulder has been converted into a running lane, named all lane running smart motorways) and there are a small number of
dual carriageway A-roads which do possess hard shoulders (for example, parts of the
A1,
A2 and
A27). Hard shoulders are always marked with a reflecting solid white line which is wide and is provided with a
rumble strip. A line of red
cats' eyes is also used, and is placed to the side of the line. On many modern non-motorway roads, hard strips are provided. These are usually wide, and are bounded by thinner solid white lines, and often without a rumble strip. ==See also==