Bicycles A number of features make this
protected intersection much
safer. A corner refuge island, a setback crossing of the pedestrians and
cyclists, generally between 1.5–7 metres of setback, a forward stop bar, which allows cyclists to stop for a
traffic light well ahead of motor traffic who must stop behind the crosswalk. Separate signal staging or at least an advance green for cyclists and pedestrians is used to give cyclists and pedestrians no conflicts or a head start over traffic. The design makes a right turn on red, and sometimes left on red depending on the geometry of the intersection in question, possible in many cases, often without stopping. Cyclists ideally have a
protected bike lane on the approach to the intersection, separated by a concrete median with splay
kerbs if possible, and have a protected bike lane width of at least 2 metres if possible (one way). In the
Netherlands, most one way cycle paths are at least 2.5 metres wide.
Bicycle traffic can be accommodated with the low grade
bike lanes in the roadway or higher grade and much safer
protected bicycle paths that are physically separated from the roadway. In Manchester, UK, traffic engineers have designed a protected junction known as the Cycle-Optimised Signal (CYCLOPS) Junction. This design places a circulatory cycle track around the edge of the junction, with pedestrian crossing on the inside. This design allows for an all-red pedestrian / cyclist phase with reduced conflicts. Traffic signals are timed to allow cyclists to make a right turn (across oncoming traffic) in one turn). It also allows for diagonal crossings (
pedestrian scramble) and reduces crossing distances for pedestrians.
Pedestrians Intersections generally must manage
pedestrian as well as vehicle traffic. Pedestrian aids include
crosswalks, pedestrian-directed traffic signals ("walk light") and over/
underpasses. Walk lights may be accompanied by audio signals to aid the visually impaired. Medians can offer pedestrian islands, allowing pedestrians to divide their crossings into a separate segment for each traffic direction, possibly with a separate signal for each. == See also ==