Showing posts with label traffic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traffic. Show all posts

Saturday, January 23, 2010

A Road for Everyone



I’ve been in India for one week and the one aspect of Landscape Architecture that I’m fascinated by is the street system. The streets here are used by all walks of life. It’s a place where modernism meets traditionalism; where the slow and the fast all share the road; and it works.

The philosophies of street design are very contrasting. Back in the United States, the focus is on how to minimize interaction between the pedestrian traffic and the vehicular traffic. Here, it seems that there is little concern whether or not the two groups are segregated or not. I think one reason this is of little concern here is that the driving philosophies are also different. In the United States people are defensive drivers and always assuming that everyone around them is an idiot. Whereas in India people assume that everyone else knows what they are doing.

At first this system seems chaotic and very dangerous, but once you understand the driving styles it makes a lot of sense. In a city with such a high density, why re-design a road system that has designated areas for different types of traffic; when that same space can be used to incorporate all types of traffic and move people through the city more efficiently? People move within a hands length of each other, be it a motorcycle, auto-rickshaw, bike, or pedestrians; they all move right alongside each other. Lines are painted on the road, but I have never seen them used. People will just as easily drive right down the middle of the line as they would drive in between the lines.


Crossing the street is another aspect of the system to get used to. There are very few crosswalks and I have yet to see someone use them, and there are certainly no pedestrian lights at the intersections. The key to crossing the road: don’t hesitate, and trust the drivers. Which seems very contrary to what we’re taught but it must be remembered that the driving philosophy here is completely opposite of ours and what we’ve grown up with. It’s rare to see someone cross the entire street at once. Usually the street has to be crossed in increments, wait for one car and then move a few yards, stop and wait for another vehicle to pass and then move another few yards, and so on until you’ve crossed the streets. Even though I’ve found myself standing in the middle of the road facing a slew of oncoming traffic, I’m not bothered by it because I have to remember that I have to trust them just as they have to trust that I’m not going to move in front of them at the last minute.

Despite all of this, I feel just as safe walking along the road here, as I do walking along a sidewalk back in the states. I have seen cars, auto-rickshaws, traditional rickshaws, motorcycles, mopeds, bike, camels, carts, people, dogs, cows, and goats; all traveling along the roads.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Dangerous Intersections in Downtown Amsterdam


· Before arriving in India I am exploring Amsterdam and the Landscape architecture in the city. I have been in Amsterdam for two days walking around the city. I am amazed at the historic grandeur of the city, and also at the transit systems. In the past two days I have seen nearly 15 collisions between pedestrians and vehicles, vehicles and bicycles, or bicycles and pedestrians. The streets and sidewalks are rarely consistent in size and may or may not be delineated from each other. There is no ‘one-type’ of material used to signify which is a pedestrian walkway and which is for cars. One minute the road will be filled with pedestrians, the next it could be taken over by bicyclists, with the occasional car. Not only do pedestrians have to worry about cars, but they have to watch out for bicyclists as well. Both bikes and cars do not stop for pedestrians, even at crosswalks. Many times I found myself standing around, gathering my bearings only to realize I was about to get run over by a bike. In many areas, there are abrupt changes in where car traffic can or cannot go.


· The main streets are very wide with many lanes of traffic. Since this city is of radial design, most streets intersect at dangerous and awkward angles. There are usually 1-3 medians in a main road. The medians are very narrow and difficult to accommodate all the traffic; they are certainly not wide enough for a bike to safely stop. The one good thing designed with the wide roads and many medians is that there is a traffic light for each median. Therefore, if it is safe to cross part of the road, there will be a traffic light to illustrate this and the rest will still be red. The picture is one such example of the busy streets. This particular picture shows a road with one median but two crossing lights. The traffic lights are not as we are used to them, tall and set on the opposite side of the intersection so anticipating traffic is also of great difficulty.