The installation of Traffic-Calming Devices (TCDs) is an extremely valuable countermeasure to prevent vulnerable road users from fatalities in urban contexts. Among all the TCDs, Berlin Speed Cushions (BSCs) seem to be one of the most promising because they reduce speeds but do not affect emergency vehicles. However, previous research on BSCs is limited and lacks some important aspects, such as the analysis of speeds at different distances from the cushion or the investigation of the influence of other context variables. In this study, BSCs of different lengths (2.20 m, 2.70 m, and 3.20 m) were deployed in the City of Bari on three roads belonging to the same area. To overcome the limitations of previous research, speeds were recorded using a laser-speed gun before and after the implementation of BSCs, in different conditions, in order to take into account the effect of the following factors: the time of day, day of the week, and average hourly traffic. An ANOVA analysis was performed, with speed as the dependent variable and the above-reported factors and the test road site (proxy variable for the cushion length) as factors, independently repeated for six distance ranges with respect to the cushion. The results reveal that speed evidently decreases immediately before (down to about 13 km/h) and after the cushion (down to about 12 km/h), time of the day is an important factor (speed decrease is much more evident during the morning than the evening), and the length of the cushion has some influence on speed decrease (the speed decrease is lower for the longest cushion).

Analysis of the Factors Influencing Speed Cushion Effectiveness in the Urban Context: A Case Study Experiment in the City of Bari, Italy / Berloco, Nicola; Coropulis, Stefano; Garofalo, Giuseppe; Intini, Paolo; Ranieri, Vittorio. - In: SUSTAINABILITY. - ISSN 2071-1050. - 15:8(2023), p. 6352. [10.3390/su15086352]

Analysis of the Factors Influencing Speed Cushion Effectiveness in the Urban Context: A Case Study Experiment in the City of Bari, Italy

Berloco, Nicola
;
Coropulis, Stefano;Ranieri, Vittorio
2023-01-01

Abstract

The installation of Traffic-Calming Devices (TCDs) is an extremely valuable countermeasure to prevent vulnerable road users from fatalities in urban contexts. Among all the TCDs, Berlin Speed Cushions (BSCs) seem to be one of the most promising because they reduce speeds but do not affect emergency vehicles. However, previous research on BSCs is limited and lacks some important aspects, such as the analysis of speeds at different distances from the cushion or the investigation of the influence of other context variables. In this study, BSCs of different lengths (2.20 m, 2.70 m, and 3.20 m) were deployed in the City of Bari on three roads belonging to the same area. To overcome the limitations of previous research, speeds were recorded using a laser-speed gun before and after the implementation of BSCs, in different conditions, in order to take into account the effect of the following factors: the time of day, day of the week, and average hourly traffic. An ANOVA analysis was performed, with speed as the dependent variable and the above-reported factors and the test road site (proxy variable for the cushion length) as factors, independently repeated for six distance ranges with respect to the cushion. The results reveal that speed evidently decreases immediately before (down to about 13 km/h) and after the cushion (down to about 12 km/h), time of the day is an important factor (speed decrease is much more evident during the morning than the evening), and the length of the cushion has some influence on speed decrease (the speed decrease is lower for the longest cushion).
2023
Analysis of the Factors Influencing Speed Cushion Effectiveness in the Urban Context: A Case Study Experiment in the City of Bari, Italy / Berloco, Nicola; Coropulis, Stefano; Garofalo, Giuseppe; Intini, Paolo; Ranieri, Vittorio. - In: SUSTAINABILITY. - ISSN 2071-1050. - 15:8(2023), p. 6352. [10.3390/su15086352]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11589/252641
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