Publication | Closed Access
Safety Effects of Narrow Lanes and Shoulder-Use Lanes to Increase Capacity of Urban Freeways
55
Citations
4
References
2004
Year
Empirical Bayes MethodTraffic TheoryEngineeringSafety EffectsShoulder ConversionsFreeway CapacitySafety ScienceTraffic EnforcementInjury PreventionSystems EngineeringLogisticsTraffic SimulationTransportation EngineeringTraffic SafetyRoad Traffic SafetyUrban PlanningTraffic EngineeringIncrease CapacityNarrow LanesCivil EngineeringBusinessRoad Traffic ControlTraffic Management
Congestion on urban freeways often creates a need to increase freeway capacity by adding an additional lane. Although adding a lane by widening the existing roadbed is often difficult and expensive, restriping the traveled way with narrower lanes, converting all or part of the shoulder to a travel lane, or a combination of both often is a practical solution. An observational before-and-after evaluation with the empirical Bayes method was done to examine the safety effects of projects involving narrower lanes or shoulder conversions on existing urban freeways in California with four or five lanes in one direction of travel. The evaluation found that projects converting four lanes to five lanes resulted in increases of 10% to 11% in accident frequency. Projects converting five lanes to six lanes resulted in smaller increases in accident frequency. These increases in accident frequency may be the result of accident migration caused by relocation of traffic operational bottlenecks.
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