Davis Square Traffic Signals
1:49
Large Traffic Signal with FYA
0:52
Removing an Old Traffic Signal
3:59
Пікірлер
@Ajaykumar-yv2px
@Ajaykumar-yv2px 2 сағат бұрын
hello sir we have a team govt register company we provide traffic Survey classification data please suggest how can we get foreign clients
@imperiallegion5573
@imperiallegion5573 4 күн бұрын
Now, in the UK even if there is a single lane in each direction, there is a bike box. So if you turn right, you give way to upcoming traffic and HOLD the whole traffic behind you. Who the fuck did design this shit? Btw, I am a cyclist. I feel it is much easier to just dismount and then cross like a pedestrian not blocking the whole lane. Is it the same in other countries?
@lighthousepicnic
@lighthousepicnic 9 күн бұрын
6:08 yes, seems like a great place to park........ (the project looks great btw!)
@Ölðerøsé
@Ölðerøsé 10 күн бұрын
There isnt trees with tap roots, maybe in rare cases in extreme climates trees will? But in city conditions with compact soil all trees will have most their roots in the first 3 feet
@redwerd2429
@redwerd2429 15 күн бұрын
Edge wood? If you say so.
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering 12 күн бұрын
Yes, this street is called Edgewood Avenue
@Nothinghere0101
@Nothinghere0101 15 күн бұрын
1:07 Wait, WHAT, WHY WOULD YOU DEMOLISH 5 HOMES FOR A ROAD EXPANSION?!? SCREW YOU CONNECTICUT
@Nothinghere0101
@Nothinghere0101 15 күн бұрын
0:00 Building a better America ❌ Building a Car Centric America ✅
@Nothinghere0101
@Nothinghere0101 15 күн бұрын
Oh, you know what that sounds like, ANOTHER CAR CENTRIC ROAD!
@mentalillness1574
@mentalillness1574 16 күн бұрын
Needs more physical protection
@zed2927
@zed2927 16 күн бұрын
It seems that the parts that arent up on the curb are temporary until the road gets rebuilt so its up on the curb like the middle part
@awsomeman5646
@awsomeman5646 16 күн бұрын
Well marked, largely protected with buffers and bollards except for at driveways or when raised, and even given a dedicated light. This should be standard, but instead it’s considered impressive because it’s rarely implemented-how sad.
@davidjym
@davidjym 20 күн бұрын
Some traffic engineers have nothing better to do 😮
@margaretsheppard2538
@margaretsheppard2538 22 күн бұрын
Sidewalks and bridge are beautiful. Bike lanes are awesome. They should have included the flag pole though. Derby's River Walk is a huge asset to the town's redevelopment, I hope they don't separate it from the downtown with a row of oversized buildings. The new ugly, oversized apartment building that blocks the sun and the view of the river is anything but "cool".
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering 21 күн бұрын
Think this was meant to go on a different video but appreciate the perspective!
@byronchavarria4954
@byronchavarria4954 24 күн бұрын
Lots Of Traffic Lights 🚦 🚥 In Long Island New York Are Being Replaced By Mast Arm From Span Wire For No Reason
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering 24 күн бұрын
This happens in CT too, usually because the span wire signals have reached the end of their service life and the new standard for signal replacements is usually mast arm installations
@djplonghead5403
@djplonghead5403 Ай бұрын
I would love is places made stroads miserable to be on so people would find alternatives to get places. Of course, having alternatives is the difficult parts considering you have to get funding and backing. A local college campus has raised sidewalks and I now think they should be everywhere.
@jaydeeification
@jaydeeification Ай бұрын
Very nice work. I'd recommend reflective tape near the tops of the bollards so they are more obvious to drivers. They're going to see some action on those corners ;-)
@pattycarljackson
@pattycarljackson Ай бұрын
They did such an amazing job.
@SpieleundSprit
@SpieleundSprit Ай бұрын
They should make the bumpout go even further and make that street even narrower.
@dmitch1991
@dmitch1991 Ай бұрын
Can we talk about the fact that the white paint is slippery when wet and can cause accidents and injuries? Possible solutions could be as simple as cutting grooves in the paint? Anybody?
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
The white “paint” is called thermoplastic and it is embedded with antislip gritty material. Mainly for the crosswalks and symbols, the shoulder lines are just epoxy resin
@pattycarljackson
@pattycarljackson Ай бұрын
CT fast track looks like it would make a great light rail system. I hope it works out with the buses and ends up being used enough to make it light rail and to expand it
@pattycarljackson
@pattycarljackson Ай бұрын
North haven,Milford,west haven and orange all need tog et on board and start making roads better for pedestrians.
@pattycarljackson
@pattycarljackson Ай бұрын
Didn’t realize this was CT. I live in west have/milford and work at amazon in north haven and I’ve wanted to ride my bike in the summer or take the train then bike but there is almost no to ride to stores in Milford post road and going off of the post road there are zero sidewalks or bike lanes and it is annoying. I wish this state took pedestrian safety and walkability more seriously. Thanks for this video.
@danieljk826
@danieljk826 Ай бұрын
Good improvements for sure, but it isn't quite "great" yet. I would have loved to see bulb-outs at all the crossings to narrow the crossings to a tight 20 feet (2 x 10ft lanes) to further calm traffic, especially turns. The shoulder lines are better than nothing as they visually narrow the lane, but they don't decrease the crossing distance, which is also really important. Another options, if there is room, is to add a median island to give pedestrians 2 separate 10 foot crossings, letting them cross one lane at a time which is more efficient, and forcing the cars through a slight chicane which calms the traffic even more, which is especially important at the intersections. The intersection at 13:45 could also have been a median Island, forcing on direction of traffic to the side. The bio-swale is obviously a good thing, but that could have gone anywhere.
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
Sure, anyone watching this video can come up with a list of things they would do differently. But these projects are designed based on years of exploration, utility coordination, public meetings, internal meetings, and deciding what creates the most impact based on the limited budget provided. Also, the bioswale towards the end could not have gone anywhere. The bumpout is within a parking lane so creating a median instead of a bumpout would eliminate the parking lane, which was not something approved for this block.
@danieljk826
@danieljk826 Ай бұрын
@@everydayengineering For sure! I didn't mean to imply that the improvements that did happen weren't good enough. But if we do take lessons away from this project to apply to others, it is also good to set the sights as high as possible and let things get value engineered down from there. re: the bump-out - I definitely think it could be a median instead. All you would do is swap the positions of the bump-out and the adjacent travel lane along with some striping to smooth out the turn and make it a little more gradual for the cars. There is enough room on either end to have the travel lane curve out towards the curb and back within the space between and including the two driveways - parking is already not allowed there so no spots would be lost. Also, it helps to reframe the curbside as individual parking spots (as they are marked in this example) rather than as a continuous parking lane. There is no reason for parking to be uninterrupted, and the spots where there is no parking (such as in daylighted areas around crosswalks, or between two driveways that are so close as to not leave room for a car to park) can be used for street trees or bioswales. Also, a median design along with a raised crossing would calm the traffic down even more. The cars were driving by you quite fast, far over 25 mph by my eye. Thank you for an awesome video documenting your city!
@Cami555555Sheep
@Cami555555Sheep Ай бұрын
why'd they remove pedestrian plaza? will it come back?
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
It was a one month pilot to gauge feedback and traffic operations i believe, so only a temporary permit. I would think that if the public and the local elected alder pushed for its permanence, it might happen. Sadly many pedestrian plazas elsewhere in the city tend to get removed for the winter, even when they prove to be very popular (such as on orange st)
@RKreflex
@RKreflex Ай бұрын
love the bollards, dont see those too often
@StreetfilmsCommunity
@StreetfilmsCommunity Ай бұрын
Very nice! I need to come for a walk In NEw HAven this Spring!
@gerhard6105
@gerhard6105 Ай бұрын
Ofcourse we Dutch are used to such road constructions for decades already. It looks very nice and is an absolute improvement. It should be the new USA standard. This is from the 90's already: maps.app.goo.gl/7d4NapKFaejDBYkb8?g_st=ac
@jjsheets
@jjsheets Ай бұрын
First video I’ve seen of yours after it came up in recommendations. Really interesting insights and information. Never would have thought about changes to draining for a raised intersection, so that was interesting to hear. The improvements to bring some of those intersections to 90-degrees look like they’d be major improvements to anyone walking there.
@chasbodaniels1744
@chasbodaniels1744 Ай бұрын
Great series on the Elm City’s street improvements … please keep ‘em coming!
@sfdsdfsdfsdfful
@sfdsdfsdfsdfful Ай бұрын
12:11 When do cars have to stop for the pedestrian? Do cars have to stop once the pedestrian is in the crossing island or when the pedestrian streps out of the crossing island into their lane? Shouldn't they stop when the pedestiran is in any part of that road because it's only two lanes?
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
Theoretically yes but we also know that drivers dont always follow traffic laws. So this is an extra measure of protection with the added traffic calming
@toddjasper1
@toddjasper1 Ай бұрын
Great video, just wonder if there’s a more pleasing streetscape alternative to the bollards at the raised crosswalk intersections?
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
I believe there are decorative bollards that exist, but we’ve also seen bollards in other neighborhoods get painted by the community
@timhahn7542
@timhahn7542 Ай бұрын
I've seen giant concrete flower pots used.
@IceMeowso
@IceMeowso Ай бұрын
oof, that crossing at the start kills. (hopefully not literally, but probably.)
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
It does look awkward but it’s a fully protected movement (no conflicting traffic)
@onepinea
@onepinea Ай бұрын
perfect spot for a roundabout!!
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
Wayyyy too small for a roundabout
@mentalillness1574
@mentalillness1574 Ай бұрын
You can take the LIRR from Grand Central to Jamaica, then at Jamaica take the AirTrain to JFK airport
@SpiritualGenius-ly2yb
@SpiritualGenius-ly2yb Ай бұрын
This also gives the opportunity to make that one-way block of Lawrence into more green space, which would definitely make it safer for all users.. Less roadway would mean fewer conflict points for vehicles coming from either direction.. and of course, having more green space would be better for the neighborhood.. So, it actually would be best for pedestrians to have the space over cars.
@beepboop9848
@beepboop9848 Ай бұрын
Maybe a nitpick but those bollards could use some reflectors lol
@Niko02b
@Niko02b Ай бұрын
Great video and cool to see new haven improving there street design. Greetings from Germany!
@benhogan7036
@benhogan7036 Ай бұрын
Love to see planters installed by the community working as vertical elements to calm traffic!! It’s great when locals really take ownership of the infrastructure…
@CrispeeCrisps15
@CrispeeCrisps15 Ай бұрын
14:00 “stops people parking too near the crosswalk” clearly not 😂😂 it’s covered in tire marks
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
Oh you mean from the construction vehicles that were actively doing work on this area?
@CrispeeCrisps15
@CrispeeCrisps15 Ай бұрын
@@everydayengineering that’s from parked cars
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
@@CrispeeCrisps15 yeah i guess you know this street better than i do
@priusskipper
@priusskipper Ай бұрын
Bump outs like this should be mandated for any new or repaired infrastructure. I also would’ve loved to see the crosswalks be elevated rather than the dips that allows water and snowmelt to puddle up at the crosswalk.
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
This work was done as part of a sidewalk repair contract, so additional items for raised crosswalk paving, new drainage, and crosswalk striping were not in the scope.
@CrispeeCrisps15
@CrispeeCrisps15 Ай бұрын
The sidewalk can’t have been roadway there’s a big ass tree in it
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
ass tree
@odess4sd4d
@odess4sd4d Ай бұрын
Won't somebody please think of the semis
@salgentile6
@salgentile6 Ай бұрын
Ah yes, because this is an industrialized area where we will consistently see large semi-truck traffic going through and using the area.... (:
@danielrose1392
@danielrose1392 Ай бұрын
Surely parked cars up to the intersection where a better situation for trucks. This intersection was never great for semis, but using the opposite lane you could turn before and you can still turn.
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
I can assure you that large trucks have zero reason to use these residential streets. The largest vehicle we design for in this area is a school bus
@makotohanazawa6560
@makotohanazawa6560 Ай бұрын
left turns are possible in a semi. and with the absence of bollards i am confident i can use a little bit of the kerb to make a right. just my two cents as a trucker
@NickCombs
@NickCombs Ай бұрын
/s I hope
@alanthefisher
@alanthefisher Ай бұрын
Nice to see actual thoughtful pedestrian friendly designs. This is a great example of how DoT's are slowly changing to be less car-brained, or at least I'd hope.
@xouxoful
@xouxoful Ай бұрын
Let’s hope. But for 1 intersections retrofitted, how many bad ones are created every week or month ?
@IceMeowso
@IceMeowso Ай бұрын
Less DOTs and more cities/towns. Most DOTs have people that want these kinds of improvements. It is the cities/towns - especially in CT - that do not, or simply don't care.
@IceMeowso
@IceMeowso Ай бұрын
* I should say that it is their representatives on local boards, commissions, and in the legislature that do not care. Plenty of places have active urban advocates that are simply sidelined.
@mentalillness1574
@mentalillness1574 Ай бұрын
State of Connecticut DOT has a Complete Street policy for all state-funded road projects. They’re honestly a sleeper pick for “most pedestrian friendly DOT” in the US
@a.b2966
@a.b2966 Ай бұрын
It is very basic. Im surprised it hasn't happened before
@adamt195
@adamt195 Ай бұрын
What were the typical curb radii here on the side streets? And do you know the new curb radius of that corner at the very end at 14:55?
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
I believe they are either 10’ or 15’, and the last corner i want to say is 25’ (used to be around 60’)
@vlaardingerrr
@vlaardingerrr Ай бұрын
I live in a pedestrian/bicycle friendly country, where I live those median island like 11:34 are everywhere where they assume pedestrians will cross the road. Sometimes they make it as a unofficial crosswalk without the white stripes for pedestrians, they do this when they’re is a official one nearby (<200ft) or when they prioritize cars above pedestrians. For extra safety for the pedestrians the road doesn’t have big/wide shoulders after the median island stops, so the road users must slow down, and just wide enough for trucks and buses to pass.
@flyguy1237
@flyguy1237 Ай бұрын
I'm curious why the crosswalk at the senior center didn't become a raised crosswalk, or the intersection at the school? Do you have any idea why?
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
Someone else had that question too, it was originally going to be raised but once the contractor started working there they found many underground utilities that weren’t on the plans which prevented the necessary drainage installation for a raised crossing
@flyguy1237
@flyguy1237 Ай бұрын
One comment I have (and I want to reiterate that I am stoked you guys have done what you've done) is that the lane narrowing paint can give the impression of a bike lane when the narrowing distance is large, which might be unintended and could be dangerous. A solution to this could be to bring the curbs more into the road (to physically narrow the road) in the future. I am curious if there's any studies that talk about the maximum effective narrowing distance for paint-based lane narrowing (can the narrowed lanes become ineffective if the road shoulders are too wide). Once again, really good work.
@danieljk826
@danieljk826 Ай бұрын
Absolutely! 10 foot lanes with a shoulder is great, but 10 foot lanes with a curb are way better. Less experienced cyclists will be hesitant to take the lane and will stick to the shoulder even if it is a foot wide. More experienced cyclists know to take the lane, but I don't fault newbies (or kids) for not being comfortable doing that even though it is safer.
@QemeH
@QemeH Ай бұрын
The second variant offers no benefits to safety over the first that I can see - but it does impede throughput both on the road and the trail more. IMHO, it's definitively the worse of the two options.
@QemeH
@QemeH Ай бұрын
You know... it's really easy to go "this is still not enough!!!" when looking at a typical half-assed US american road safety project. But I think it is very important that we see these steps for what they are: the right direction. These changes need to be made, studied and replicated - only then will people accept that "walkable neighborhood" isn't a buzzword, but a way of life that can only exist with MAJOR changes to infrastructure and zoning.
@Sam-w5v
@Sam-w5v Ай бұрын
How is this half assed? They literally repaved the entire road
@QemeH
@QemeH Ай бұрын
@@Sam-w5v The PLAN is half-assed, not the execution of it. If you wanted to be serious about pedestrian safety, you could use the huge curb-to-curb distance to install islands forcing cars to "slalom" a bit every now and then, breaking up these long unterinterrupted runways, especially downhill. Instead of painting a small "shoulder" on both sides to just optically narrow the lane, you could install a bi-directional bike path on one side and make it protected, preferrably by a hard curb. The wider part where there is on-street parking would lend itself perfectly to also have an extended curb on the other side of it, making the crossing there also as easy as on the side that's shown in the video. The raised portions of the sidewalk could be in the same paveing as the sidewalk to visually enhance the message to drivers that they are crossing a pedestrian path - not the pedesrtians crossing the road. You could remove about 3/4 of the unneccessary signage along the road and just say "residential street, use caution" at both ends, so drivers have to actively judge for themselves what a danger is and where it's going to pop up making them less likely to speed (e.g. a big yellow "SPEED BUMP HERE" sign tells drivers they can safely speed up to that sign), you could incorporate green space in the afforementioned traffic islands and plant trees in them, further enforcing the perception of "this is a street you shouldn't go past 25 mph on, probably slower" to drivers - all without lowering throughput or travel time _at all_ If I did a proper in-depth study of the road in question and showed it to dutch urban planners I sure they could come up with yet more and cleverer ideas, but just off the top of my head, there are *several* things that could be done more and better without impeding cars.
@Sam-w5v
@Sam-w5v Ай бұрын
@QemeH why would you show it to dutch urban planners? This is the U.S, dutch people are from the Netherlands. Besides, where would they get the money for those extra renovations?
@QemeH
@QemeH Ай бұрын
@@Sam-w5v "Dutch people are from the netherlands" - did you figure this one out on your own? Seriously, US americans can be so condescending in their ignorance... I would show them to dutch urban planners because they are simply the best in designing for _overall_ safety (as in: lowest deaths of all road users combined) in their streets. They have all of the above mentioned techniques as a standard in their repertoir and don't build any streets without them. They are _decades_ ahead of the US in terms of pedesrtian, cyclist, rollerblader, scooter driver and wheelchair user. In short: I would ask them, because they are the best. And as to the question where they would get the money: The entire street was redone anyway. They did very extensive curb modifications (which, to be clear, are all good!) and even installed new drainage at some points. Painting it new with different lines would cost nothing, a few more islands and some plastic bollards are negligable in the immense amount that is a total street resurfacing. And if you go about it in a smart way, you can even have the utility companies pay for a portion of it by having the underground infrastructure work (like maintenance and installing new cables) done at the same time. But even if you don't manage that and it's still a considerable addition to the budget: Every roadside incident that does not happen effectively EARNS the state money - less policing, less fire and rescue, less healthcare, less lawsuits and so on. In europe this figure is in the hundreds of thousands per week on moderately busy roads - but that includes the full social healthcare costs which you guys don't provide by the state, so the benefit will be lower (for the state, it will still give those benefits to the residents, but we're talking about budget, so...)
@LordCybz0
@LordCybz0 Ай бұрын
Well it's something. Not ideal but a start! Hope they monitor the changes and continue to make improvements
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
Would love for you to explain how it’s not ideal. Thanks!
@nyx1865
@nyx1865 Ай бұрын
@@everydayengineering I think the street layout (which was the focus of this video) is pretty ideal but it woud be much better if there was puplic transit as well as for example shops nearby so you don't need to drive. I mean at the moment the great pedestrian infrastucture isn't even needed that much bc why would you walk if there is no destination.
@everydayengineering
@everydayengineering Ай бұрын
There is a bus route here which many residents use, and at the first raised intersection location there is a very popular convenience store. Pedestrian infrastructure is always needed because you can’t force people to own cars just to move around their community.