Chicanes Chicanes are often placed on
residential streets as a more aesthetic means to
slow down cars.
One-lane passages Sometimes, for budget reasons, and where traffic is fairly low,
bridges exist as single-track corridors.
Tunnels in remote areas can also be one lane when the tunnel is short and traffic is low, when building a hill or blasting away the mountain is too cost-prohibitive.
One-way single-track roads Single-track roads also exist as one-way stretches.
Exit and entrance ramps for
freeways and
motorways are among common examples of one-way single-track roads.
Private single-track roads The most common example of private single-track roads are long
driveways of rural properties such as
country houses and
farm property.
Ice roads The mountain passes on the
Dalton Highway in
Alaska have a rule where goods-carrying northbound
truck traffic has the right of way, while returning southbound traffic has to stop, as mentioned on
Ice Road Truckers. The reason behind this procedure is that traffic going north is in somewhat of a hurry to deliver equipment to
Deadhorse,
Prudhoe Bay, and the drill site over the frozen
Arctic Ocean.
Temporary one-lane restrictions , United States When reconstruction is being done on two-lane highways where traffic is moderately heavy, a worker will often stand at each end of the
construction zone, holding a sign with "SLOW" or "GO" written on one side and "STOP" on the reverse. The workers, who communicate through yelling, hand gestures, or radio, will periodically reverse their signs to allow time for traffic to flow in each direction. A modification of this for roadways that have heavier traffic volumes is to maintain one direction on the existing roadway, and detour the other, thus not requiring the use of flaggers. An example of this is the M-89 reconstruction project in Plainwell, Michigan, where westbound traffic is detoured via county roads around town. == User etiquette ==