In southern Italy they have a fantastic and economic way of slowing cars down: they just don’t maintain the streets at all and let potholes grow everywhere. So drivers are in constant fear of damaging even their SUVs. Works perfectly.
@KoeiNL3 жыл бұрын
Belgium also employs this method. The moment you cross the border from the Netherlands into Belgium you notice it right away.
@petermenzies91933 жыл бұрын
Here in the US we take it as a challenge driving 70 mph down a 55 swerving to avoid potholes.
@samhu58783 жыл бұрын
It is what people do everywhere. Especially in the great lake US because of the heavy snow that damages the roads.
@MtJochem3 жыл бұрын
@@KoeiNL To be fair though. The moment you cross from liege to maastricht over the A2, the following happens: alright highway road on the belgium sinde of the border, small sign on the left that tells you you have crossed the border and are now in the netherlands, 1000m of pothole road, big sign on the left that welcomes you to the netherlands and says what the local speed limits are, immidately followed by perfect and silent ZOAB. Pay good attention and you will notice that this ZOAB is gone within 10 minutes of you entering the country. It is only there to 'welcome' you in. I am absolutely sure that this is done on purpose by the Dutch only to maintain the immage of 'look we have perfect silent asphalt here and the highways in belgium suck'. Which might be true, but the worst patch of road is that 1,5 km on the dutch side of the border.
@sammy13ificationable3 жыл бұрын
America : the sequel
@jumpingfreak33 жыл бұрын
Being a European and having played American Truck Simulator, I kept getting confused by the constant speed limit change, despite literally nothing else changing with the road. It feels so incredibly arbitrary.
@Dragoonski3 жыл бұрын
it doesn't FEEL arbitrary. it IS arbitrary, they for the most part change because "someone said so I guess that's how it is". I know near my house there is a very long road (arguably maybe edging onto stroad territory as they build more along it) that is around 55mph, it will however randomly change to 40/45 (i forget which) for about 1/2 a mile. then go back to 55mph and eventually up to 65 as it fades of into nothingness a few miles further (it goes for a while but it doesn't really go to anything significant except the next highway exit). Along the entire stretch of road there isn't really much of a difference in terms of what is around to warrant the speed changes. arguably the section which is 65mph is the most dangerous as it is where a majority of the neighborhoods will merge into that street which is more-or-less the only direct route out of the small town. frankly its really concerning to see the road/stroad be so dangerous for literally no reason.
@SebastianTheGreat2 жыл бұрын
Civil Engineer here. The “sending your lowest paid intern out with a clipboard” part is hilarious and 100% what happens every time our traffic department needs to do a traffic study
@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe83072 жыл бұрын
Hes claiming the build a road then let people drive on it with no speed limits to find out the speed limit! HOW DEMENTED AND DELUSIONAL IS HE! They decide the speed limit beofre its opened to traffic you derp!🤦♂🤣
@xXJ4FARGAMERXx2 жыл бұрын
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 So if they opened it before setting a speed limit, will all hell break loose?
@tntfreddan31382 жыл бұрын
@@xXJ4FARGAMERXx Over here there will always be some 20, or so, year old in a Volvo going 200km/h down an avenue in the center of a town
@Eagle-rv3iy2 жыл бұрын
I did this as a low paid summer intern for a department of transportation looking to examine how a change in speed limit would affect school zones. The police were called because of a strange man in a car outside a school with a black box in his dash.....
@kobayashimaru81142 жыл бұрын
@@Eagle-rv3iy Maybe the DOT should start marking their vehicles lol
@xanadian93 жыл бұрын
We had a highway/traffic engineering professor at UMaine who taught this exact approach. This was back in the 90s. And, probably to the surprise of nobody, he was from Sweden.
@IRAMightyPirate2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Per Gårder! He's still there and he taught me Transportation Engineering in 2009; learned some fantastic lessons from him and, yes, he was very critical of US roads and a big proponent of roadways using roundabouts and other systems that improve roadway functionality. Brilliant teacher.
@JoonasD63 жыл бұрын
"This approach seems reasonable, until you think about it at all." This is amazing and widely applicable.
@Jobother3 жыл бұрын
North American urban planning in a nutshell
@spamacc67323 жыл бұрын
@@Jobother its not only na trust me
@mikkihintikka72733 жыл бұрын
True
@jasonriddell2 жыл бұрын
IMHO for ROADS engineered CORECTLY it IS THE right way but the KEY being ENGINEERED
@mvz3 жыл бұрын
The amount of common sense dismissed due to perceived sunken costs and bad habits of old school traffic design is unbelievable. Your entire channel is telling people very basic realities and solutions and yet I get a fresh perspective on something every time. Love it.
@guy-sl3kr3 жыл бұрын
"Well a few decades ago, we created roads with poor design so obviously the only thing we can do now is to keep them as-is until the end of time!" -americans probably
@primeoetzand3 жыл бұрын
The sunken cost fallacy is a really bad argument here. Cities and governments can do what the Netherlands have started doing ~40-50 years ago, and that is upgrading the roads to the new standard whenever you need to redo the roads. We keep a very updated infrastructure here because, since safety standards are constantly updated here, and most roads need work every 10-20 years most everything is updated and what isn’t is not far behind.
@randomizednamme3 жыл бұрын
@@guy-sl3kr I think people just don't know any better, I certainly did not before discovering this channel
@notaword11363 жыл бұрын
@@guy-sl3kr-Americans definitely
@XepptizZ3 жыл бұрын
@@randomizednamme Better yet, people will make it a culture thing. Americans often proudly describes themselvs as carperson. It's ingrained into their identity just as their political standing.
@davislinkaits69353 жыл бұрын
I'm quite amazed by the design of the signs themselves. If I were the driver in Canada, I would surely miss some 90% of the speed limits. They don't pop out and are put in corners. In contrast, every country in Europe uses a prohibitory round-shaped sign with a red outline to indicate a speed limit. They, for most of the time, stick out and are placed in easily accessible places. Maybe this is another thing that the US and Canada need to look in to.
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I found it really annoying to drive in Canada this summer, after being in the Netherlands for a while. I was glad that the car I was borrowing had a heads up display that showed the speed limited (based on map data) so that I didn't need to look for signs. It's ridiculous.
@lonestarr14903 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Every bit of advertisement is more flashy than the traffic signs, easily outshining them.
@BlueScreenCorp3 жыл бұрын
As someone who has lived in Canada all my life, I can concur many signs get covered by overgrown trees and bushes, and the white signs are hard to see at night against the snow in the winter sometimes. The only saving grace us that a speed transition to a lower speed always has coming change and a change begins sign so there are 2 chances to see them and slow down.
@fdagpigj3 жыл бұрын
@@BlueScreenCorp In Finland and the other Nordics, the signs are like everywhere else in Europe, except that instead of a white background, they use yellow. This is specifically to make it stand out in a snowy environment. I cannot imagine how unreadable small black and white signs must get in Canada.
@tinefajfar36763 жыл бұрын
@@fdagpigj how do you deal with road works than? In Slovenia (and neighbouring countries as far as I know) we use yellow background specifically for temporary signs (most often road works). But yes, I can totally understand your problem with white background and snow.
@bryanmilstid40872 жыл бұрын
I have to admit, I had zero interest in any of these topics until I came across your channel. Now I'm buying books and looking in to how I can help affect change. This is honestly the best series and channel that I have had the pleasure of viewing. You make the subject come to life and have relevance to your viewers. Keep up the excellent work.
@javierflores092 жыл бұрын
Very true, up until now I paid no mind to city design but nowadays I am in awe when I see thoroughly designed street in my city, it is really eye-opening and goes to show the importance of good civil engineers
@butterofthepeanut34442 жыл бұрын
Same, every since I've discovered this channel I've started to see my city more as a, "wow we need change asap"
@LiiMuRi3 жыл бұрын
In France and other places in Europe, when you come from a country road with 80 km/h limit to a village with 50 or 30 km/h limit, they often have various kinds of bends, chicanes, dividers and poles forcing you to slow down. Very effective
@Jacksparrow49863 жыл бұрын
Roundabouts.
@alphastratus66233 жыл бұрын
@@Jacksparrow4986 Roundabouts with different diameters.
@indominusrex16523 жыл бұрын
Or traffic lights in eastern europe and most of eastern Hungary
@MrToradragon3 жыл бұрын
Which is, IMHO totally stupid idea. They should either build bypass with total ban on any sort of new development connected to it (I know about town where they got bypass in late 90's, ad build new development on it, had put some roundabouts there as well, and now are complaining about traffic jams.), or it is not that important road and then there is virtually no reason, I would say, for such dangerous thing. The first that should be done is upgrade of road network in such manner that it will fit 21st century standards. Even with all hype for mass transit, for cargo trains, there still will be demand for road traffic (unless it is banned and then we have much greater problem to solve) and in my opinion it is wrong to pretend that people in cars are in error when plenty of roads are about one car wide.
@MathiasK29-443 жыл бұрын
@@alphastratus6623 a roundabout with a different diameter around the same intersection
@genuinecve3 жыл бұрын
I am a civil engineer in the United States, and while I agree that there are MANY issues with roadway engineering, I have to disagree that engineers are stubborn and stuck in our ways. Nearly every engineer I've talked to and worked with would love more progressive infrastructure. That includes engineers who have been working for 30+ years all the way to new grads. We are tested and KNOW that making a road tighter and more uncomfortable will lower the average speed of the road. The main issue is that we, as the engineers, aren't the ones directly paying for the road. Whatever municipality the project is in is footing the bill. We can suggest all day that creating a road with 11 foot lanes, divided bike lanes, and medians will improve roadway safety, but if the owner sees that as negatively impacting the service level of the road (which it doesn't) then they are MUCH less likely to go for it. In the end, as with most other things, money dictates the decision.
@baronvonlimbourgh17163 жыл бұрын
That is why those things should be done on a federal level. Municipalities design and build streeds and roads. But what kind of roads can be used where and how they need to be designed is the same everywhere.
@bgm769-g2k3 жыл бұрын
@@baronvonlimbourgh1716 I'm not sure I understand what you mean. Roads across the US are actually very very consistently designed. However, some minor details or choices in road features might differ. I've seen a massive expansion of roundabouts that never used to be a feature in US roads just within the past 10 years. But road signs are all the same across the US. The color used to draw lines and other symbols on the pavement are all the same across the US.... What the original comment is talking about is a lot of minor details like the lanes are a little more narrow. For example, some car parks might feel different because one lot might be angled parking spots while other lots are straight. Or some lots might have more narrow parking spaces than others. My understanding of your reply in context of this car parks example is like someone saying, "all these car parks are so different from each other! This is why we need federal regulations over car parks so there is consistency in car parks!" But there really aren't enough differences to warrant those claims. And the same really is to be said for all the roads in the US
@Scornfull3 жыл бұрын
@@baronvonlimbourgh1716 the federal government are even worse idk how adding more bureaucracy to an already bloated system would be better as it takes millions of dollars and years to replace small parts of road
@baronvonlimbourgh17163 жыл бұрын
@@Scornfull things are done pretty well and very efficient here by our government. Economies of scale and all that, plus it centralises things so nobody has to invent the wheel again which makes things a lot easier and cheaper so everything is kept up to date constantly. Never hear anybody complaining about it really, so it must work pretty good.
@BaconRobotics3 жыл бұрын
I'd also like to add that changing a sign is WAY cheaper than redesigning the whole road, and US municipalities in particular usually have a very tight budget, unfortunately. So the safest decision often gets ruled out in favor of the cheap one.
@Lazirus9513 жыл бұрын
The "design speed" of the road is such a good point you bring up. We have a road that enters into our neighborhood. The lanes are wide, it's completely straight and there isn't an intersection or anything until 3/4 a mile down. The speed limit is 30mph and it feels agonizing to drive down that road every time.
@sungleong3 жыл бұрын
In my city, they don't want you to slow down. They want to speed so they can catch you speeding 🤠
@TheKeule333 жыл бұрын
@@sungleong oh hello, fellow german
@Kurgosh13 жыл бұрын
@@sungleong Definitely a thing here too. Many small towns will make a significant chunk of their budget off speeding fines. The ones that are really evil about it will take a section of road that doesn't even need to be slower (say, part of a highway that passes through the edge of their city limits) and post a lower speed on that stretch, and just write tickets all day.
@gamermapper3 жыл бұрын
It's 1.2 km for anyone wondering
@TransRoofKorean3 жыл бұрын
I don't like the idea of putting trees right by the edge of the street to make it look more confined, just because there are some driveways around. What's the point, give you the paranoid impression a kid might randomly pop out from behind a tree at any time? Yeah? Okay, now what if a kid actually does that? Their point is to make people drive slower to increase safety by making the street less safe to drive on faster, again, tautologically, *_by actually making it less safe to drive faster on._* Some of the points are great, but that one bugs me. Also, they're constantly contrasting Canadian / American drivers to those in dense old European towns. He literally calls the force-you-to-slow-down designs "civilized" to point out our uncivilized arrangements, and sure there are things to learn, but all I can think of is the simple fact that things are so much more spread out, Americans I'd guess drive on average *_five times as far_* as Europeans every year. (That's my guess, am I far off?) Designing *_for_* faster travel while differentiating pedestrian and bicycle traffic seems to make vastly more sense than intentionally slowing everyone. Although, I should say once more, they are definitely correct in the distinction of streets: of course there are clearly places that *should* force slow traffic.
@aaronbritt20253 жыл бұрын
We had a road in my city that we thought had a short section with a speed limit set artificially low. We found that a speed limit study had been done and that the limit, by the 85th percentile rule, should be that same as the rest of the road. We asked the city raise the limit at a city council meeting and they refused. We then found that the city had been raising a significant amount of money through civil fines for speeding on that one section of road. We sued the city and won. We forced them to raise the limit to the same limit as the rest of the road.
@malachiwhite3562 жыл бұрын
Wonderful!
@universaldorks11532 жыл бұрын
Y'all need to ask your state legislatures to enact anti-speedtrap laws like we have here in GA. If it's not Georgia State Patrol they can't pull you over until they clock you going exactly 10MPH or more over the speed limit. Have had a few tickets thrown out in court because of it and a few pissed off DeKalb and Gwinnett county cops.
@supercellex4D2 жыл бұрын
I mean in the Nazi sense for both
@Cobalt9852 жыл бұрын
@@hosmerhomeboy "the light would turn yellow for an unusually short period of time" Yep. It's this way in the downtown where I live in AB. You have to slow down at a genuinely unsafe rate to avoid running a red -- it _has_ to be to rake in those red light tickets.
@robfriedrich28222 жыл бұрын
@@malachiwhite356 Was there a refund?
@joshualogue9843 жыл бұрын
Officer: Sir do you know how fast you were going? Me: Lemme tell you 'bout a little thing about the Psychology of Road Design
@StrokeMahEgo3 жыл бұрын
Officer, an hour later after listening and not getting a word in edgewise: ok drive safe, I'm giving you a verbal warning
@matthewjbauer19903 жыл бұрын
Something similar happened to me believe it or not. I was on my way to visit a customer in Madison Indiana. I turned down a big street from 65 and the speed limit dropped to 45. I ended up going 70 not realizing it. 2 regular cops and a k-9 cop later... I told the officer that driving the speed I was going felt right. He knew I wasn't local and he asked if I frequent Madison. I said no. The officers agreed to let me off with a verbal warning after the drug dog gave the OK that all my UPS packages full of electronics and computer gear weren't drugs.
@AlbinoMemberTen3 жыл бұрын
I worked in the Civil Engineering industry for almost 15 years and your documentary series is more engaging and interesting than any single day I can remember. Except for maybe the Christmas parties.
@emiliofernandez71173 жыл бұрын
Damn lol
@phueal3 жыл бұрын
Comments like yours are so helpful, because every time I see videos like this I think "this is so interesting, maybe I should work in traffic engineering!?", and I have to remind myself what a typical day on the job is actually like.
@AlbinoMemberTen3 жыл бұрын
@@phueal Oh my friend, that's kind of you, but I insist that I am the last person to listen to on this. I worked with many people who loved the job and came to work excited most days, but I wasn't one of them. Unfortunately I was painfully lacking in self awareness for a long time, so I continued down the wrong road year after year.
@AlbinoMemberTen2 жыл бұрын
@@banquetoftheleviathan1404 get a new job now if you can, your older self will be glad you did I feel.
@AndyKashen2 жыл бұрын
Are people in your profession finally changing?
@Flugmorph3 жыл бұрын
Had no idea traffic designers would choose the speed limit based on the average speed of observed drivers on that piece of road. that is absolutely insane to me.
@oliver_siegel3 жыл бұрын
It's the scientific method! Speed limits are discovered, not created 😂
@borek7723 жыл бұрын
Yup, that's just batshit insane stupidity for anything even slightest complexity. People like to speed and make stupid decisions all the time. One of the cities I lived in had a great example of it - we called it's Masters Turn. It's on 30,000 car/day crossing of major highways forming ring around the city. It's a two lane road with sharp bend and very little visibility (due to noise/crash barriers and bend radius) and thus 50 km/h speed limit. You would think people would be smart to notice that their visibility drops to 5 -10 meters and they should actually drive the speed limit (or less). You would be wrong - this intersection had multiple crashes per day (especially during autumn/winter) which ended up gridlocking entire city and generating hour long traffic jams. Two years ago a speed camera was installed there - and the same week, number of crashes dropped from 1-2 per day to 1-2 per quarter. This intersection even had it's own Facebook page (with new crash video posted pretty every day, after the speed camera went live - the fanpage died due to inactivity:(
@macaron31415926533 жыл бұрын
It makes sense on a rural or open road, it doesn't in the city,.
@qidydl3 жыл бұрын
In one sense, that's actually an implicit agreement with the point of this video--the speed that drivers will go at is mostly an inherent property of the road design, so they're setting the posted speed limit based on the "natural" speed limit. All they need to do is close the loop: altering the posted speed limit should require drivers to already actually be going slower in the first place, due to changes in the road design, like what he explains in the video.
@Flugmorph3 жыл бұрын
@@qidydl true, true.
@junahn19073 жыл бұрын
I suspect that one of the big reasons why there is no incentive to change these bad streets/roads/stroads is that many municipalities rely on the revenue collected from speeding tickets.
@Saucy-ws6jc2 жыл бұрын
It costs more for the police to be out to enforce.
@junahn19072 жыл бұрын
@@Saucy-ws6jc That's a different color of money though. In America, spending money on cops is politically attractive
@Saucy-ws6jc2 жыл бұрын
@@junahn1907 Obviously if a government gets money from a fine, they spent more to have a unit out there so obviously it cost more than made.
@bl83882 жыл бұрын
I drive all over the USA and this video shows a common problem, but it isn't everywhere. I do wonder about what you mentioned as some of those roads change speed limits so often, in busy locations (where you are likely to miss their constant change of speed) it does seem intentional. I see road speed limit signs like 45 mph with a 25 mph zone almost immediately behind it. That seems intentional. Once again, depends on where you are, but seems shady.
@LetztezBatallion2 жыл бұрын
@@Saucy-ws6jc If you collect a single fine, sure, that will cost more to enforce than what you make, but if you get, say, 10 fines per day, that more than pays for the cost of the agent and patrol car out there. The average cost of a speeding ticket in the US is $150, 10 tickets that's $1500, with the average daily wage of a police officer hovering around $150 thats a nifty money source
@grandbuba3 жыл бұрын
"This method seems reasonable. Until you think about it. At all". I've been having this realization about a lot of things lately, it seems.. :-)
@pleasedontwatchthese95933 жыл бұрын
lol, i kind of feel like the host is somewhat dramatic. "everything the world is build on is totally wrong", i mean it can be better but what we have today had to beat dirt roads with no street markings and we have dominated that.
@rodjacksonx3 жыл бұрын
No one ever looks for the unintended consequences.
@SergeantExtreme3 жыл бұрын
Communism in a nutshell.
@CaeruleanWren3 жыл бұрын
This sums up basically the entirety of US and Canada transportation infrastructure.
@FoggyMcFogFace3 жыл бұрын
@@SergeantExtreme Wait, you're trying to make the point that the way the US makes their infrastructure is dictated by communism?
@gasdive3 жыл бұрын
"this approach seems reasonable; until you think about it *at all*." Good god, that line sums up so much about this world.
@awhahoo3 жыл бұрын
Back to front
@erikalexander30853 жыл бұрын
I keep getting sucked into these mini-documenteries (or whatever the correct name is) even though I have nothing invested in the topics I keep watching them and finding them highly interesting and educational. Great work :)
@femboyskeleton91503 жыл бұрын
They are called video essays :)
@houndofculann17933 жыл бұрын
For me this is creating the urge to play Cities Skylines to apply the knowledge I gained =D I was kind of grossed out when watching a previous video I realised that I've always been building stroads in that game =D
@robthomas58273 жыл бұрын
Everyone has something invested in this topic. Too many people have a very narrow view of the world. Literally everything around us impacts our "quality of life." Cars are one of the biggest killers of human beings on earth. We are all invested in car infrastructure and car culture. Living next to high-speed vehicle traffic is detrimental to the mental and physical health of all people, even if they don't notice.
@erikalexander30853 жыл бұрын
@@robthomas5827 Well yes, I didnt say it wasnt important. It just struck me how engaged I was to a topic that I myself just take for granted without reflecting over and that theirs some layers to this.
@erikalexander30853 жыл бұрын
@Peter Evans Well as a person who have lived in both types of enviroments/countries I wouldnt say that this is missleading, Id say I agree with the points made. The US city I lived in had between 2015-19 about 40 fatalities per 10.000 people a year and where I live in Europe now that number is 2 fatalities per 10.000 people (both cities are in the 130.000 population size), so theirs gotta be something to this.
@spigney46232 жыл бұрын
And this is how we get infamous "speed traps". When the police in the town lower the speed limit to half the design speed of a road to meet their traffic fine quotas. There is a 4 lane road in my hometown that changes from 55mph to 30mph for no descernable reason. I and my coworkers used to avoid it completely because its so hard to focus on maintaining a crawl on a wide road and the fine wasn't worth it.
@alexriddles4923 жыл бұрын
The best road sign I ever saw was at the edge of a small town in Missouri. It didn't say speed limit 35. It said the lights are timed for 35. I immediately slowed to 35 at the edge of town, stopped at one red light in the center of town and drove through about 10 other traffic lights all of them green.
@RustyDust1013 жыл бұрын
That was an approach here in Germany as well. Worked to some degree. But one small town I know of enhanced that idea. They had street based speed controls, not for a speed trap, but for several street lights with associated pedestrian lights. Any time someone went over the speed limit for that area, they simply turned the next street light red, and the pedestrian lights green. They even announced that fact at the entrance to the town. Since then that street has become much calmer as people have learned that it won't do them any good speeding as they will then be slowed to a complete stop at the next street light and have to wait an extraordinary long time for it to turn green again. To ensure people didn't run those red lights they set up a Blitzer / a kind-of-speed-trap with a camera attached. But not for exceeding speeds, but for taking the picture of anyone running the red light, including their license plates. As running a red light is punished a lot more rigorously than a small speeding ticket, most people inherently obey a red street light avidly.
@albertbatfinder52403 жыл бұрын
@@RustyDust101 I had that idea one day in the car, just riffing on the phrase “red light cameras”. Normally cameras which photograph red-light runners, why not take some immediate action to slow things down? What town actually implemented it?
@MaaveMaave3 жыл бұрын
@@RustyDust101 that's hilarious
@pluisjenijn3 жыл бұрын
We have that here on the ring road in Eindhoven. A sign says how fast you should drive (50-55-60-65-70) to get all traffic lights green. It's very nice and fast! We had this already in the 1980's but the technology has improved a lot over the years
@skippy29873 жыл бұрын
@@RustyDust101 That's fantastic! Good way to frustrate people who speed out of habit. Also a good way to trigger red lights for more traffic light gran prix action (on roads with appropriately low witnesses and potential victims), not that I know anything about that of course...
@BlahBlahBlah136232 жыл бұрын
In Australia, we tried a rule that you must slow down to 40km/h (24mph) if there are any emergency vehicles with flashing lights on the side of the road - for example, a police car giving someone a speeding ticket. The rule even applied on 110km/h highways (86mph). There was extreme pushback but the government trialed the rule anyway. The 1-year trial was ended early due to the sharp increase in rear-end collisions and videos of semi-trailers slamming their breaks to match the changed speed. In some cases you had one policeman writing someone a ticket and another in the same car with a speed gun out to catch those who didn't slow to 40km/h in time. It was a fucking mess.
@pavarottiaardvark34313 жыл бұрын
What's REALLY clever about the trees at 8:58 is that the firs four are spaced out and then they get closer together. This makes the driver feel like they are going faster than they are, and encourages them to slow down.
@LnPPersonified3 жыл бұрын
Wow, that _is_ clever!
@olafs_valinieks3 жыл бұрын
I really wonder why does it even work? There is a road (more like a section of a road) that I know of in my country that has trees on sides. Speed limit is 90km/h. And guess what? Almost no one goes slower than 90-100km/h. Of course there are those who go 70 km/h for some reason and it creates dangerous overtaking situations.
@mikemx553 жыл бұрын
Yeah... i thought exactly the opposite: look, a bunch of trees just to divide traffic from the bike lane. No incoming intersections, no bikes, no pedestrians.. I would speed up like crazy on that area.
@allsystemsgootechaf98853 жыл бұрын
@@olafs_valinieks dude most people on the road are air heads. Driving on autopilot. Of course it works.
@pavarottiaardvark34313 жыл бұрын
@@mikemx55 it's not "oh trees" it's the fact that you're already driving past trees and *then* they get closer together. This makes you think that you are going faster than you are. It's a commonly used design trick and trees aren't the only thing - fence posts, blinders between lanes, anything vertical can be used. In Britain you sometimes get yellow rumble lines painted *across* the road on the approach to roundabouts at increasingly small intervals, which gives drivers visual, tactile and audible signals
@CharlieND2 жыл бұрын
5:24 "most people don't consciously think about what speed they're going" Then there's me who checks my speedometer every five seconds because I'm paranoid about being pulled over for no reason
@jellyfishes8002 жыл бұрын
Same, I freakout if I see red and blue lights in the mirrors
@CharlieND2 жыл бұрын
@@jellyfishes800 Yeah. I've had that experience before.
@piotrsajuk64352 жыл бұрын
Lmao, I also check the speedo frequently, but I still drive over the limit by like 5 or 10 km/h
@Nazuiko2 жыл бұрын
I dream of a world where cops dont just pull over drivers for no reason. If theres no clear and present danger, theres no need for immediate intervention or fines.
@bl83882 жыл бұрын
And Stroads that change speeds constantly. You miss a sign because you're trying not to rear end someone or hit a biker. These are a problem with constant speed changes. And then I have to get my truck around the guy who just got pulled over by a cop, in stroad traffic.
@JohnFWitt3 жыл бұрын
In Texas, those descending speed limits going into small towns are ineffective for another reason as well - they're often times speed traps meant to generate speeding ticket revenue for the town. They're used precisely because they're ineffective. They want drivers who are unfamiliar with the area to keep going at or near the same speed they were going outside of the town, knowing the vast majority of drivers will simply pay the ticket instead of driving back out into the middle of nowhere to try and fight it. This is true of a lot of areas in the Southern US; I'm not sure if towns in Canada do the same.
@jacnel3 жыл бұрын
Some towns in Canada do this, especially the smaller ones with a local police force. They also do it with photo radar and then blame the drivers for falling victim for the poor road design.
@rhoddryice54123 жыл бұрын
@@geobloxmodels1186 that documentary was about bootleggers too.
@zachsielaff82963 жыл бұрын
It's not just the southern US, it's all over. I live in Wisconsin and there are many small towns with speed limit changes designed exactly like this. Most of them also have some sort of obscured place for the cops to sit, just beyond the sign, so they can write ticket after ticket without actually making anyone safer.
@jackfordon77353 жыл бұрын
As someone from Michigan who got slapped with a 240 dollar ticket on his first day in Texas after missing one of the 5 signs leading into a town (53 in 40 zone that had literally just begun), I can confirm this comment is accurate lol
@JustAnotherHo3 жыл бұрын
In Canada we just do this, but we also make sure to put a tree or other object in front of the speed limit sign in order to further endanger the people in these small towns and get more people killed, so you know, we can bill a few more drivers with speeding tickets.
@undercoverduck3 жыл бұрын
On a Dutch driver's test you can actually get questions on the speed limit of a road/street without any road signs in the picture. You're ought to be able to recognize these types of roads consciously as well.
@flitter54003 жыл бұрын
They also told me that in USA a unmarked residential street is 25 for example.
@Kryptnyt3 жыл бұрын
Dutch CAPTCHA must be really confusing
@mindstalk3 жыл бұрын
@@flitter5400 Eh, that really depends on the state or municipality. I'd guess the default of such a street to be 30 MPH. There has been a movement by some cities, in the past few years, to lower that to 25 or even 20 MPH (Boston and somesuburbs, Seattle; also Montreal in Canada, making 30 KPH the default and 40 KPH on the busier arterials.) I find it telling that US residential speed of 30 MPH / 50 KPH is the speed Japan will use on busy multi-lane streets. Montreal's arterial speed of 25 MPH / 40 KPH is a school zone speed in the US...
@unicodefox3 жыл бұрын
@@Kryptnyt I mean, CAPTCHA usually asks for street signs, so if there are none, you can just not select anything :P
@Kryptnyt3 жыл бұрын
@@unicodefox Or you have to select everything
@maximushaughton24043 жыл бұрын
My home town in the UK, some years ago 80's/90's, decided it was to dangerous for pedestrians in the town centre, with the narrow paths/side walks and busy roads. So they ripped up the tarmac/asphalt and put in coblestones, much to the annoyance of the vehicle users and the business owners. Slowly over time the town centre started to come back to life, it's almost at the point where you don't reeally see vehicle in the town centre, so much so, they did an experiment and banned cars in the town centre at curtian times of the day. The experiment was so popular, they are giving it another go, to see if it has the same success.
@Swansniff23 жыл бұрын
In my town in sweden we have certain streets in the center called "summer streets" where they close the street for cars during summer to promote pedestrians and biking. Cafes and restaurants are allowed to have a larger outside sitting area. Its a really nice way to get the city more beautiful during summer when people are more likely to walk the streets.
@asharak843 жыл бұрын
Edinburgh started down the path but decided "I know, how about we let buses run right through the central street". Sounds not too bad if your mental image is one of a bus every few minutes... however, the way they've designed the whole public transport system is to have every bus route end up coming along that one road - so it's basically full of buses. Kinda annoys me as they could have had it nearly traffic free, just the (now) trams and then a lovely pedestrian area, opens up opportunities to do all sorts of stuff. No idea why it is so centralised as a transit system, every nice city I've visited has not had such a hub based model but we're doing nothing at all about it
@massimo84083 жыл бұрын
This is truly interesting. I didn't thought of cobblestone having this effect. But it makes complete sense
@zenko2473 жыл бұрын
@@Swansniff2 In UK they are the PLAY Streets cars ONLY to access homes on the street
@SaltPlusF43 жыл бұрын
@@Swansniff2 We have some very good streets but there are also a lot of cities that suffer from being designed for cars too
@Nemo_Anom2 жыл бұрын
Maybe the mismatch in speed design is intentional: the speed trap. Make your road subconsciously have drivers go fast, and place a single random sign informing them that the speed limit is much lower. Then the locale profits off of speeding ticket revenues. That's what's really going on.
@jasonriddell2 жыл бұрын
when I was young in Victoria there is a stretch of "road" fully divided 2 lanes a direction HUGE shoulders great sightlines and BETTER then the hiway you exited to get on the road and the speed limit is 50 KPH and zero exits / intersections at all
@mvarez3 жыл бұрын
"narrow complex and twisty, most people will drive slowly" *eurobeat intensifies*
@DavidSimmons423 жыл бұрын
Keep an eye out for a trueno delivering tofu.
@mikeprevitera58393 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you live near the Dragon’s Tail.
@mikeprevitera58393 жыл бұрын
@@STho205 I love the roads in this area! I’ve only been on the dragon twice, too many bad riders. I ride to have fun not to be dangerous. The beauty of the area can only be seen at a leisurely pace.
@namenamename3903 жыл бұрын
This comment paints such a vivid picture, I love it
@jacobnelson75223 жыл бұрын
the Midwest truck culture need I say more. to be honest if you make it clear a truck shouldn't go somewhere a way will be found.
@realityDUBSTEP3 жыл бұрын
The bit about roads with high speed limits in rural areas is so damn common in Texas. There is a small rural town that is on my commute to work and just before it the speed limit is 105kmh(65mph) but obviously most people are going 70+ and the highway goes right through the center of it. They have posted signs to slow down, if you do it though people behind you will pass you in the oncoming lane and honk like maniacs.
@willekevanderham53263 жыл бұрын
I am in a discussion on an other site where someone claims that lowered speeds and the speed traps are only there for extra money for the local police/town, as a kind of extra toll. He did not appreciate that lowered speed limits might be because the local situation may needed lower speed limits, like people living on those locations and slower traffic users using the same roads.
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
When I was driving through these towns I saw a film crew interviewing a woman. They were doing a local news story about drivers speeding through town. It's insane to me how common this situation is, but nothing is ever done about it beyond a few random speed traps by police.
@stuuuuuuuu3 жыл бұрын
@@willekevanderham5326 There are plenty of towns in the US that use their police (and speed traps) to blatantly extort people. I know of many spots where nothing fundamentally changes about a road and the speed limit is randomly lowered by 15mph with law enforcement hiding on the other side. This particularly occurs on highways adjacent to towns experiencing urban decay and is fairly common in between large cities on the east coast. These towns don't generate enough tax revenue so there is no point in stopping people from speeding, instead it is both encouraged and punished. These are often small conservative towns/counties that do not tax their residents enough, and therefore have to make up that deficit. There are many towns where police funding itself relies on these traffic infractions. This isn't a problem in most of Europe because the police aren't as corrupt and people actually pay taxes
@mushroomsteve3 жыл бұрын
It's because they'd rather have the speed trap and the revenue for the cops/city than make a safer design.
@Zraknul3 жыл бұрын
@@stuuuuuuuu last week tonight did an episode where there are small towns on highways that get over 50% of town revenue from traffic tickets. Their schools are basically funded by people getting caught speeding. Certainly a perverse incentive.
@moostachepikachu40853 жыл бұрын
The dreaded statement "but I'll talk about that in a future video" It means more videos (hooray!) But it also means I gotta wait for this interesting and insightful content
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
Now that I have an editor, I'm hoping videos will come out quicker. ;)
@carfreeneoliberalgeorgisty51023 жыл бұрын
@@NotJustBikes how quick?
@seybertooth92823 жыл бұрын
IKR? I have the same reaction: "Yay moar videos" and then "Noooo, I have to wait!"
@jpalmer19673 жыл бұрын
@@carfreeneoliberalgeorgisty5102 The words of an addict to his videos. I can relate. LOL.
@carfreeneoliberalgeorgisty51023 жыл бұрын
@@jpalmer1967 i like him because he's constantly trashing my crappy hometown of London Ontario.
@paull86783 жыл бұрын
This is a great vid, and one of my pet peeves as a transportation professional. The problem in a lot of places (including where I live in the US) is that we have these 6-lane stroads with a design speed of 50mph, that initially have a 50mph sign, but the county has now realized that they can just stick a 30mph sign on it, along with a speed camera, and just collect money from drivers. So now there's a financial incentive to keep the bad stroad design.
@nathanpetrich73093 жыл бұрын
I am in no way recommending that anyone break the law, but it certainly is physically possible to damage the speed camera without being detected. If that was done repeatedly, the local authorities would eventually be forced to give up on their efforts.
@jick51663 жыл бұрын
This is something very simple that I wish people actually listened to: SIGNS ARE NOT ENOUGH.
@QemeH3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the three laws of traffic dynamics: #1 - Paint is not infrastructure #2 - Signs are not infrastructure #3 - (Unenforced) Laws are not infrastructure
@jick51663 жыл бұрын
Very true.
@Alacritous3 жыл бұрын
The fundamental principle here that no one is saying is that people are too stupid to follow signs. I agree completely. I just thought someone needs to actually say it.
@guru47pi3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, my hometown decided to be bike friendly, which is generally great, but one of the dumb things they did was take many straight, wide, safe, arterial streets that were 35 mph and make them 25 mph. The result is that either you get stuck behind someone going so slowly you want to die, or you're technically speeding.
@testpeer3 жыл бұрын
@@guru47pi As cycling commuter, and Dutchmen, I have to travel over some narrow (less than 4 meter wide) polder roads were the speed limit in mph is 38 mph. Now a lot of people actually slow down when passing me, but once in a while there is someone that does not or even continues speeding. When you're vulnerable, because on a bike, that is absolutely scary, as they pass quite close to you. So although I understand car drivers wanting to drive quicker, it is only possible if cyclists and pedestrians can use a separate path. If that is not possible, speeds above 25 mph are very dangerous, as any collision could also seriously harm car drivers. In those cases, the road could and should be adapted to prevent the loss of human lives. As someone driving a bike most of the times, I want to reach my destination safe and sound. When I drive a car, I want to get to where I need to be without killing or maiming anyone, as that guilt would be with me for the rest of my live. So that road design is needed, and as bonus, it makes driving much more comfortable.
@redtsun673 жыл бұрын
Indiana has a genius way of making drivers feel unsafe and slowing down: the reverse speed bump, AKA potholes
@amberdent6513 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, Indy potholes. To steal another's joke: Britain may drive on the left side of the road, but we proud midwesterners drive on what's left of the road, which is usually nothing. The intersection of 16th and Central Avenue, my beloathed.
@blastermanr63593 жыл бұрын
Just like New Hampsire Bridges or Michigan's highways.
@cannedpineapple27023 жыл бұрын
Florida too!
@SbubbyS3 жыл бұрын
Classic Indiana, they'll slow you down either by not maintaining roads for 5+ years or setting up construction zones and abandoning them for months on end
@Bergen982 жыл бұрын
It seems Indiana took this very old technique from Russia. Our roads without any potholes are such rarity, it should be protected as endangered species 😂
@Suho10043 жыл бұрын
They did the same thing in Seoul--they recently lowered all of the speed limits in and around the city without changing anything about the roads. So now you've got ridiculous situations where you're on a super-wide, relatively straight, eight-lane (four lanes each way, that is) road on which you could very comfortably drive 90... but you are expected instead to be driving 60. I actually tried doing that once, just for kicks, and it feels like absolutely _crawling_. I would say it has actually made the roads more dangerous, because you have a small fraction of people who diligently stick to the speed limit constantly in danger of being run over by everyone else. So you get more cars weaving in and out of lanes, thus increasing the risk of accidents. It's not so bad in or near the city center, where high traffic volumes make lower speeds inevitable, but on orbital roads or roads out of the city, where there is generally less traffic, it's a different story.
@nomadben3 жыл бұрын
That's fucked! Much love to Korea.
@evan126973 жыл бұрын
Sounds all too familiar. Go look up the NJ Parkway and imagine driving 65 on that - never mind the fact you could only do that if you were the only car on the road. The speed is minimum 75, preferably 80/85 and the signs are just there so the state police can sodomize you
@miyounova3 жыл бұрын
Same (to an extent) in Australia. Roads and "streets" are super wide. I'm from Europe and when I first arrived in Aus, as someone without any motorised vehicle, the width actually shocked me because I barely had time to cross the streets in the whole duration of the green light. Absolutely ridiculous. It also increases distances traveled on foot for no good reason.
@MaaveMaave3 жыл бұрын
We have the same thing on the Scajaquada Expressway. It's a highway that cuts through Delaware Park (wtf?). A narcoleptic driver went off the road, killed a kid, and now the wide highway is a 30mph road where everybody still goes 45 until the cops show up
@xanbell77233 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, if it feels like you're impeding traffic by going the speed limit, you're stuck between a rock and a hard place :(
@ymirakel3 жыл бұрын
When i was growing up i had to cross a low-speed, two-lane street on my way to school. It was quite a long and straight stretch of road so people often drove way past the speed limit there. At some point the crossing was re-built so it was only wide enough for one car to pass through. At the time I thought this was stupid, as I could not understand why the change was made. I now see it as a simple and clever solution to a problem, a solution which works on multiple levels. It forces drivers to slow down and to be more aware of their surroundings, it makes the street narrower where the pedestrians cross which in turn means less road for them to cover, and it makes the pedestrians more visible to the drivers as they are no longer only in the peripheral of their vision. A very simple, cheap and effective way to make it safer for children to go to school.
@dandiehm84142 жыл бұрын
A better way would be to build a raised walk-over and ban pedestrians crossing at ground level.
@holger_p2 жыл бұрын
@@dandiehm8414 No, that's too expensive. To Support wheelchairs you have to have elevators and soon you are at $1million per crossing. We are lucky if this is done for railroad crossings.
@gameshoes3 жыл бұрын
5:25 Damn, this is why I find driving so exhausting. I actually do check for speed limits, and notice almost all road signs. I also frequently check my mirrors to make sure I know the positions of all cars around me. I actively drive because a lot of other drivers suck, and I hate it.
@TheVincentKyle3 жыл бұрын
I was about to point out this timestamp for an entirely different reason -- is that guy in the hideous orange truck ahead lost? Or has he just suffered a severe head injury, thus the choice of vehicle color and rear-window decoration?
@Random.ChanneI2 жыл бұрын
I barely check my speed here in the Netherlands. As he illustrates in his video, the street design here makes you automatically drive the max speed limit! It’s crazy to me how America is still stuck with the same terrible design..
@egregius93142 жыл бұрын
I live in the NL, and I am *also* an active driver. I can not relate to people who enjoy driving and find it relaxing. The Dutch road design does help, but I am way too paranoid about sucky other drivers to fully relax. Plus I always leave too late, so I have tendency to push the speed limit a little, and with the amount of speed camera's around, it pays to pay attention ;)
@Random.ChanneI2 жыл бұрын
@@egregius9314 Flitsmeister aan en gassen toch? ;)
@Prodigi502 жыл бұрын
@@Random.ChanneI That’s what happens when you don’t update your infrastructure for 40+ years.
@LonelyRacoon3 жыл бұрын
In Nepal we've come up with system which forces even the most stubborn of the drivers to slow down. We call it the no road policy. It's quite simple actually. What the government does it that it does nothing. So the road eventually gets filled with potholes to the point you can say "there are some road in the potholes" and you won't be wrong. This way, nobody can go faster than the half of the rated speed limit. And in the monsoon, we have to befriend fishes to help us locate any sign of road. EDIT: spellings cause English is not my first language
@rickb30783 жыл бұрын
😂😂 nice sense of humor!
@satyakisil97113 жыл бұрын
Based.
@steemlenn87973 жыл бұрын
Also it's very cheap and a good example of a lean state!
@sethhubbard6983 жыл бұрын
Dang and all these years I though South Carolina roads were just poorly maintained on accident. Turns out we were ahead of our time 😂
@schrodingerskatze43082 жыл бұрын
What I see often in Germany (where I live) are trees or flowerbeds blocking a part of the street to slow cars down. It also works pretty well and you can't decide to just drive over it. But I also think that speed signs like those in the video are designed poorely, because they are pretty difficult to see. If you have a fat red circle with a number in the middle like in Europe it would also be easier to notice them without actively looking.
@heldersilva66722 жыл бұрын
The 'before/after' image comparison at 10:04 ,is an incredible example on how to completely transform a neighbourhood's quality of life, just by redesigning the road access.
@Pancakegr83 жыл бұрын
The trees beside the road not only slow down drivers, they're a safe buffer for pedestrians should a car veer off the road. Also they look nice. EDIT I'm wrong, trees are not safe lol
@draconianTL3 жыл бұрын
And in urban centres a good tree canopy is a good method of reducing street-level heat.
@Markle2k3 жыл бұрын
In an off center collision or if a car leaves the roadway sideways, the car can spin around the tree and take out pedestrians. That was my least favorite part of the video. No need to get homicidal with the drivers. Just give them good visual cues that they need to slow their pace.
@EJ_77153 жыл бұрын
And obscure pedestrians from view
@baronvonlimbourgh17163 жыл бұрын
In the netherlands a lot of trees at the side of the road are being removed again now when they get their 30 year redesign. Trees are dangerous and cause a lot of fatality's. So they stoped using them many years ago.
@Akriashi3 жыл бұрын
@@Markle2k As opposed to the car raming them head on or piling into a house? Why not counter w/ shrubs complementing the tree to counter spin on the car already being slowed by the other street-design?
@brunoglopes3 жыл бұрын
This video is simply impeccable. Having moved to the US recently, I never find myself driving the speed limit, because the roads make you feel like you’re supposed to go faster.
@ChawletMelk3 жыл бұрын
Yep. You're supposed to "go with the flow of traffic" you can actually get a ticket for driving speed limit if you're moving slower than traffic. I noticed this immediately when I first got my license as a teenager, people will honk at you for going speed limit.
@Barten00713 жыл бұрын
@@ChawletMelk This not speed limit this is speed suggestion.
@Markle2k3 жыл бұрын
@@ChawletMelk Speed differential, not speed, kills. That's why it isn't a good idea to mix bicycles and cars.
@Pand0rasAct0r_3 жыл бұрын
I mean I don't really drive according to the speed limit here in the Netherlands either. Only in towns. But roads where its max 80km/h? Nope drive 90 there. The highway where its max 100? Nope drive faster than that. Dutch roads are so safe for speeding that the speed limits set are ridiculously slow. Here 80km/h roads should be city roads that are max 70km/h now. And 80km/h roads should be 100km/h. And the highway which is 100 and 120/130 between 6am and 7pm should be 150 everywhere besides a select view spots like bridges and highways intersecting. But sadly we wouldn't change this probably.
@tobyvision3 жыл бұрын
The car lobby is incredibly strong in the USA. The Ford Motor Company invented the word "jaywalking" and got it made into a crime. We could have built cars that were incapable of speeding DECADES ago.
@XxXx-Evo3 жыл бұрын
I work in construction and this sounds a lot like what I learned about safety there: People make mistakes, so you have to make sure these mistakes don't have serious consequences. If a construction worker steps back (for whatever reason, maybe because he/she is startled by something or he/she is distracted) there should be something to prevent him from falling down (or stepping on a busy road or....). You just can't expect people to be fully focused 100% of the time, so do something to make sure people don't make mistakes or that the consequences aren't so bad.
@JM19939513 жыл бұрын
You can’t expect people to focus for 20 seconds on the road. You have to drive like everyone else is drunk.
@m32c503 жыл бұрын
@@MrWhite-pn7ui cities belong to pedestrian and cyclists, drivers should be the one conceding priority to them instead of the other way around
@pleasedontwatchthese95933 жыл бұрын
@@m32c50 I think you have to facter in that pedestrians are dumb and are the same people we put in cars but cars are harder to stop.
@TheRetarp3 жыл бұрын
@@MrWhite-pn7ui I know you are being a troll but I wanted to point out roads existed for thousands of years before cars.
@nanderv3 жыл бұрын
@@MrWhite-pn7ui Road taxes aren't taxes to be spent on roads, just like tax over potatoes isn't used to improve potatoes. It's a government revenue stream, just like any other. The government raises taxes, and spends them as they see fit. Road tax may go to hospitals (tho to be fair, cars run people over, and cause lung cancer on a large scale, so this isn't even too unreasonable), or to childrens playgrounds, schools, unemployment benefits, museums, etc. If anything, the existence of road-tax, and the non-existence of walking-tax shows that societies, generally, consider walking to be more beneficial than driving. Taxes are used to steer behavior, so higher road taxes show that we as a society want to steer the behavior of individuals within it to use the train, bus, bike, walking instead of driving by car.
@privatezeron3 жыл бұрын
I've been thinking about this for a long time now and I'm glad you made an actual mini-documentary for it. What's worse is that they legit make these roads/streets feel safe to go fast but the speed limit is suddenly so low that you just get pulled over because you subconsciously drive fast. There needs to be a huge overhaul of roads and streets design.
@lilacdoe79453 жыл бұрын
My parents were driving in Ireland and outside of cities and towns, the speed limit was effectively however fast you're comfortable going. My dad nearly crashed trying to go the speed limit before he gave up, and he's a quite talented driver.
@TehbearofDoom3 жыл бұрын
As someone who lives and drives in Ireland, you need to know the roads very well to be able to drive the speed limit, even then it can be dicey. Always feel bad for tourists trying to drive themselves around the roads here. Its like putting a new driver in the middle of a race track. Also good luck when you meet a tractor out there on the narrow ones.
@Flaggyt3 жыл бұрын
@@TehbearofDoom I love driving in Ireland/Scotland/Wales you actually need to think for yourself while driving and read the road and corners coming up. In stead of the Netherlands where every little corner has a speed recommendation so people don't have a clue anymore and when there is a corner without a sign they crash instantly. I always have a good laugh driving in the UK and see a Dutch license plate, crash waiting to happen in 1.....2..... :)
@Peadar20003 жыл бұрын
@@Flaggyt Hmmm, Ireland is not part of the UK. I’m not saying you implied it is but I’m employed by the government of Ireland to police the internet for any real or perceived suggestions that might potentially give that idea. Thank you, I’ll leave you off with a warning to be more explicit next time👋🏻
@dazzlemasseur3 жыл бұрын
I'll take the risk of getting yelled at and drive slower I don't care. Worst case scenario, I get a ticket for going too slow. Don't care about those.
@Ariccio1233 жыл бұрын
I don't understand this. Is this a maneuvering thing? People going way faster than you?
@Scarletthania3 жыл бұрын
I just checked and the Dutch traffic signs also look more in your face. Those speed limits signs in Canada are ease to miss, they look flimsy.
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
They're really easy to miss. It was so annoying to drive in Canada this summer after getting used to driving in the Netherlands.
@Scarletthania3 жыл бұрын
Canada should completely overhaul their traffic signs, among other things
@thetwopointslow3 жыл бұрын
Even as an American visiting Canada (Alberta) I feel like I hardly saw any speed limit signs, they are very easy to miss but also felt a lot less numerous than in the US
@petitkruger21753 жыл бұрын
in general almost all American/ Canadian road signs seem way to small with only black and white colours! nothing compared to the colourful, easily readable signs in Europe!
@danielgstohl99933 жыл бұрын
Based Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals
@jvmbatista3 жыл бұрын
"Why not just fire the intern and make shit up!?!" I lost it...
@treyhart68613 жыл бұрын
I thought they already did that.
@quillmaurer65633 жыл бұрын
Yeah, they did that a long time ago. Speed limits are now set by sheriffs departments seeking revenue by making speed limits unnecessarily low so they can ticket everyone.
@karito13582 жыл бұрын
The worst thing about finding your channel is that I can’t help but notice how terribly U.S streets are designed and how difficult it would be to change this. My favorite spot to visit in my state was an old European town called St. Augustine. I loved it because of the life radiating from the shops, the personality in the buildings and the ability to walk anywhere. it’s funny to think I drive 2 hours to experience something that is the norm for everywhere else in the world. Thank you so much for making videos on this topic, you really are making a change :)
@AOZMONSTER3 жыл бұрын
Not defending the practice, but just FYI, road design in the US funded by federal dollars is required to be designed to federal standards (which is stick in the 60s). So even though engineers want to change this it has to come from the top down.
@Idontknow-vm1iy3 жыл бұрын
Totally agree, engineers would generally like to build sound infrastructure, companies generally don’t care.
@baronvonlimbourgh17163 жыл бұрын
Here regulations are also very strict and set on a national level. That is how you create universal infrastructure and make sure every municipality build it the way you want it,
@AngeloArrifano3 жыл бұрын
3:31 I'm super glad the little bird managed to avoid a fatality.
@dept92033 жыл бұрын
I knew there was gonna be a comment on it. You didn’t disappoint!
@qpSubZeroqp3 жыл бұрын
I agree. That bird almost went in there under the tram by itself
@ijustdocomments67773 жыл бұрын
Glad it wasn't just me.
@nahuelma973 жыл бұрын
Yesss my thoughts exactly lol
@ArK0473 жыл бұрын
I suspect the mentality of "personal responsibility" comes up a lot when talking about a systemic approach to safe traffic speeds. Rather than ensuring that the environment is shaped to be conducive to safer speeds, it's less work and responsibility to just throw some signs up and finger wag when people don't obey them.
@tinefajfar36763 жыл бұрын
Yea I get that feeling a lot myself. It works in 99% yey! :D ...but the 1% left goes on and kills pedestrian or a cyclist, naay :(
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
Yes. The default message from police, politicians, and the public is always stuff like "please everyone pay attention!" "drive safe!" "look both ways!" There is never an acknowledgement of systemic problems; it's all a lack of personal responsibility.
@TheEvertw3 жыл бұрын
For conservative governments, the ideal government is one that has to do absolutely nothing, yet still gets paid for it. And of course, gets to award lucrative contracts to their friends & family, with as little strings attached as possible.
@illiiilli246013 жыл бұрын
@@m.p.baldnessdyslexic88 America is broken, but Ontario is in Canada. Well the most famous one is.
@sterric4013 жыл бұрын
@@illiiilli24601 Last time I checked Canada is still on the continent of north America.
@thejpkotor3 жыл бұрын
Another important consideration is highways where there are actually more collisions because the speeds are too low or suddenly drastically reduce for no apparent reason. Or there isn’t enough space set aside for longer exit ramps.
@IOUaUsername3 жыл бұрын
The sudden change in speed for no obvious reason is usually to prevent the congestion that causes accidents. Slowing approaching traffic allows the traffic ahead to get out of the way so that there's never too many cars close together. This is done with variable speed limits too, as a method to solve traffic jams. Sadly it doesn't work because people just drive the regular speed limit. Extended exit ramps have the same issue, with the more selfish drivers using this as an overtaking lane.
@thejpkotor3 жыл бұрын
@@IOUaUsername interesting. I think more highways should take the German approach to keep cars far apart with higher, not lower speeds. Several studies have also pointed out that drivers are often less attentive at lower speeds rather than at higher speeds.
@tobyvision3 жыл бұрын
@@thejpkotor I am convinced it comes down to much deeper cultural forces than any amount of design. I used to live in Nairobi, Kenya where all cars have speed limiters and traffic moves at an absolute crawl most of the time. In some of the roundabouts it was regular practice to physically rub your car against others. And the per capita deaths in traffic were still much higher than the USA for example.
@Sool1013 жыл бұрын
@@tobyvision doing a proper exam before someone gets their drivers licence handed might be helpful?
@tobyvision3 жыл бұрын
@@Sool101 absolutely. And this is certainly a problem in the USA. Our driver training is mostly a joke.
@rescuemod3 жыл бұрын
Please make a video like "Why the most bicycle friendly country builds new highways". Many people thinking, that new highway means, that they politics are against bicycles. But after I visited the Netherlands, I understood, that highways are part of good bicycle infrastructure. It's better to create roads and streets instead of stroads, like you telling in this video :)
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
Well that's kinda what my "invisible infrastructure" video is about.
@OW793 жыл бұрын
The Netherlands even have bicycle highways ;)
@casperk73103 жыл бұрын
Unless an old guy drives with a bike on the highway because he doesn't know where he is anymore. Trust me this happens
@lsbigworld66723 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: After the dutch grand prix in f1, the day before this video releases, so many cyclists took their bikes out to the races that there was a bike traffic jam leaving the stadium. Some people said it was because the trains weren't running enough or with high enough capacity, but still, seems like a good problem to have. Only in the Netherlands.
@lsbigworld66723 жыл бұрын
@@Emily-ou6lq sorry, I'm American. Race tracks are technically considered stadiums here.
@tardvandecluntproductions12783 жыл бұрын
Ah they meant the tiny train line to Zandvoort from the neighboring bigger city. As a lot of train stations also rent out bikes, I bet there was a rush on them at the city of Haarlem. Just 9km, nice trip through the sand dunes. I'm sure people loved it on that warm day.
@nosten52763 жыл бұрын
Haha, yes! I can imagine in some vivid detail. Bike traffic jams are still annoying though, like when you can't make the greens because of it.
@lsbigworld66723 жыл бұрын
@@nosten5276 I'd still rather be in a bike jam than a car jam tho. Social interaction and clean air.
@dkoda8403 жыл бұрын
@@lsbigworld6672 Social interaction and clear air? B-but if you’re socializing and breathing in good air how can you complain about being in traffic endlessly!
@fireemblemaddict1283 жыл бұрын
If you're on a 65 mph highway and you actually go 65 mph, you will annoy something like 90% of the drivers there.
@arande33 жыл бұрын
Guilty 😂
@fireemblemaddict1283 жыл бұрын
@UpNorth buses and trucks are the exceptions, we know you have rules and regulations hehe
@LRM12o83 жыл бұрын
That's another problem: Bad driver's education and (probably) too few traffic controls with too little fines
@johnwashburn74233 жыл бұрын
You bet you will. I drive 60 on a 55 mph highway in New York and if I don't want to be tailgated I drive in the right lane. On the other hand sometimes I stick to the middle and the impatient driver can go pleasure him or herself.
@SteelOfLegend3 жыл бұрын
Wait, 65? I thought that said 85.
@Slammins12 жыл бұрын
In Paradise California, there is a stroad that happened to be one of the only evacuation routes from the town. In an attempt to slow down traffic, they changed the road to be four lanes total to two lanes total. This became a major bottleneck that kept many from evacuating from the town in time while it was burning down. This needs to be kept in mind for these types of situations, too.
@aspzx3 жыл бұрын
There was a study done in my area of London where they reduced the speed limit of some streets from 30 to 20 mph but otherwise did nothing. Then they measured the effect that it had on the speed of vehicles and found it reduced the speed by only 1mph. As a result the study recommend increasing the speed back to 30. Those folks would definitely benefit from watching this video.
@NBvagabond3 жыл бұрын
"they're not obsessively checking their speedometer or reading every speed limit sign they pass" me, a new learner driver, who is doing that: ah
@JariDawnchild3 жыл бұрын
Please don't stop doing that lol. Most folks tend to do the whole "learn it until you pass a test then promptly forget it" thing.
@jaimieseejaimiedo3 жыл бұрын
My cousins driving instructor would have him verbalize everything he sees..any road sign any person and cyclist so it becomes habit...i know our traffic could use an upgrade but i dont trust most drivers to begin with...too many risk takers these days
@MrCh0o3 жыл бұрын
I mean, as long as it doesn't make you eventually too tired to a point when you might do something worse than just break the speed limit. It's never good to be too obsessive with one thing since that just means you're missing the other. Eventually you should be able to judge speed and notice any signs instinctively so you could focus more on... let's just say, more unpredictable parts of driving, like other participants
@PatrickRatman3 жыл бұрын
@@MrCh0o lmao if your passengers are making your driving experience "unpredictable" then you're one pushover of a road captain. Unruly passengers of my car will get the boot every single time. And if you're talking about other drivers then it's good practice to drive as if everybody driving around you are drunk and incompetent.
@rileyesmay3 жыл бұрын
@@PatrickRatman Yeah they are definitely referring to the latter. As a newish driver in my first three years driving I had 2 people run into me, and I have yet to cause a crash or even get a ticket for anything even though I definitely speed at times. The two people who ran into me, one was just in a parking lot so not much damage, but the other totaled my car. Since then I have gone another couple years and haven't had anyone hit me yet, fingers crossed they don't come close, but I cant even say that because literally yesterday a driver cut me off turning left, cut it inside in front of me out of nowhere and would have hit me if I didn't swerve over... But yeah, back to the speed limit topic, I definitely speed but I also definitely go like 10 under in actual residential streets because well, its safe. Point being the speed you drive is just something you do, like making your bed, whereas people running into you is something you need to be aware of and is 1000 times more important than your speed, because you know when you are driving too fast, natural human instinct to fear death in a car...
@stridernfs13 жыл бұрын
“I have 20 years experience in…” will be the downfall of the US eventually. Far too often people are getting rewarded for using the same thought process their entire career.
@emiliofernandez71173 жыл бұрын
I have 20 years experience of doing nothing. I do it very well
@Monaleenian3 жыл бұрын
The US has lots of innovation and lots of innovative people and companies. They're, at the very least, above the world average in that regard.
@austinmenezes80743 жыл бұрын
@@Monaleenian ???
@jameswagner22323 жыл бұрын
@@austinmenezes8074 why are you doubting him? he has 20 years experience asserting things to be true.
@colossusjak23 жыл бұрын
@@jameswagner2232 hes right though. In the internet & technology sector the U.S. is undoubtedly the most advanced, and a lot of other sector companies are definitely at the top of innovation. However there are a lot of things america is stubborn about, and "muh roads" is one of them. Having the right to drive your charger 50 mph over the speed limit is something most americans pride themselves after. putting money in the public sector (which roads and city infrastructure obviously are) is also not something that's very american. most of the innovation comes as a result of privatized investments. as a result, the public sector is stuck 50 years in the past. See: the postal service, public transport, the DMV, hell literally anything that I do that's government related is cumbersome, yet I can browse any youtube video on my iphone from anywhere instantly, that's america
@ClimateTown2 жыл бұрын
I’m furious to learn how speed limits are set here.
@mackray75952 жыл бұрын
Well it’s not true whatsoever so there’s that.
@SKDYCAT2 жыл бұрын
@@mackray7595 exactly this is just stupid euro nanny state propaganda
@michawolinski3142 жыл бұрын
Where I live they are straight from arse, so it's not better, and are almost never adjusted. I hate to see 30 just because 2 yrs ago there was construction zone.
@SKDYCAT2 жыл бұрын
@@michawolinski314 well clearly you live in Europe because nobody in North America says "arse"
@windhelmguard52952 жыл бұрын
better than it is in Germany. in Germany speed limits are set like this: to start off: flat in town speed limit is 50km/h when an accident happens, it's dropped down to 30km/h if another accident happens, drop it down to walking speed. so now we have roads that are chucked full of pointless speed limits because of some raging lunatic or a fucking idiot who's too stupid to look left and right before crossing the road, which leads to people routinely disregarding such speed limits because they exist for no god damn reason, to the point where people are speeding in spots that are actually dangerous because they don't know what's real any more.
@randallmacdonald48513 жыл бұрын
Before I retired, I was a professional driver. After 8 hours of urban, suburban, and rural driving, I was wiped out because, throughout the day, I drove with the attention to my driving just as close as someone ripping around the Nurburgring. So your mention of THAT level of attention brought a smile to my face. It's nice to see your website address these (unsolvable) North American Gordian Knots.
@valeriaswanne2 жыл бұрын
Yes! It's truly exhausting. I thought it was just the physical force of constant movement, turns out driving is supposed to be "passive"? Can't do it. I can't just put my antennae down and chill like that.
@ChristineL23113 жыл бұрын
As a civil engineering student, I love watching your videos to learn more outside from school !
@TheEnemiesEnemy3 жыл бұрын
In the US, when the street design doesn’t match the “desired” speed, that’s an opportunity to set up a speed trap. And that’s just a microcosm of how everything is done here
@Pand0rasAct0r_3 жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands cops like to put speed traps everywhere. And stand with their speed cameras around every corner lol. They are so shitty here. And then there is Germany where they simply don't care enough to do that and would rather let the stationary speeding cameras do that. While they focus on criminal activities and the like. Way better system.
@julian-xy7gh3 жыл бұрын
@@Pand0rasAct0r_ The Netherlands isn't perfect indeed. There is a speed camera in the 73k inhabitants strong Almelo that is earning an estimated €1 million per year.
@grassgeese39163 жыл бұрын
under-rated comment!!!!!
@AnotherDuck3 жыл бұрын
@@RoScFan I'd say that depends on where the money goes after the local government gets it. As long as it goes back into community improvements, I think it's fine. Improvements like making those speed traps unnecessary by redesigning streets so they don't easily allow higher speeds than what's actually safe.
@ritokazoriv3 жыл бұрын
I now realise why I’m having such a hard time keeping to the speed limit in Rotterdam compared to other parts of the country, its designed for cars like the American cities
@pennyroyal38133 жыл бұрын
"A hospital! What is it?" "It's a big building with patients in it. But that's not important right now." Nice use of Leslie Neilson quote from 'Airplane.'
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
I was _this_ close to using a clip from Airplane! there, but I try to resist using copyrighted material from major studios. :(
@scoobin3363 жыл бұрын
Hahah yea came straight to the comments to see if anyone else caught that
@MightyDantheman3 жыл бұрын
I definitely agree with this. I constantly see places with speed limits that simply do not match the road design whatsoever, and drivers clearly demonstrate that. I also think that speed limits should be raised in some places. There's this highway I take to work that has a speed limit of 55, however most people go anywhere from 65-75, even police officers. Clearly there's a problem.
@stevenlitvintchouk31313 жыл бұрын
The 55-mph speed limit was imposed across the country in the 1970s. NOT for safety, but because we were experiencing gasoline shortages and the government wanted us to drive slower to conserve fuel. Those fuel shortages ended in the 1980s, but various state governments kept the 55-mph speed limit to show how civic-minded they were.
@idiberug2 жыл бұрын
There are several of those in my commute, usually for no apparent reason, and they would be very annoying if people did obey the speed limit instead of chalking them up to mismanagement and ignoring them. One of them now has a traffic camera and my employer actually sent out a mailing about it because almost everyone does at least 20 over. I suppose this is what happens in a country with low trust in government.
@KyurekiHana3 жыл бұрын
The only part of this video that irked me was at the very end, you seemed to lay all the blame on the engineers. In Seattle, I've seen many cases where good road design was proposed, but then shot down by angry residents who have gotten used to the old ways of road design. If you don't have buy-in from residents, you'll usually end up with a very short career.
@Geotpf3 жыл бұрын
Basically, if you want streets to be streets like you want streets, there better be lots of high speed roads available as an alternative. Nobody wants it to take longer to get from point A to point B.
@wahid59233 жыл бұрын
The whole city has a 25 mph speed limit
@KyurekiHana3 жыл бұрын
@@wahid5923 it's less the speed limits, and more the redesigning or reclassification of roads that seems to be more problematic. Especially if such redesigns take away street parking or add more crossing points for pedestrians.
@Daniel-dj7fh3 жыл бұрын
Every so often it's the people who make things worse because they're stupid
@naryneitred3 жыл бұрын
Part of my Senior Thesis as a civil engineer was to help out a small residential area with their flooding problem. We provided an initial solution of a curb and gutter. Residents said no, curbs are ugly. Ok, large french drains leading to their various retention ponds. Nope, to expensive. Ok, we can put a giant dam at the top of the hill which no one owns and where a large majority of the rain water is coming from, hopefully it holds and doesn't redirect the water to the other houses nearby (spoiler, it fails and floods the area even more). That last one wasn't our design. We made several cost effective solutions of the first 2 but in the end we turned in our notice to be removed from the project and left. If they implemented only 25% of our solution, flooding in the worst part would have been reduced significantly, but since half of the residents were not heavily affected by the flood, it wasn't their problem so they would only pay pennies.
@abysswalker24033 жыл бұрын
highways in the us fail in this regard massively. the lanes are so wide that it feels safe to be going 100 mph on them, but the speed limit is set at 70 or 75. I wish the engineers over here would start taking the same approach as the germans when it comes to highways
@Hobojimmeh3 жыл бұрын
This new editor is absolutely amazing. Good work!
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
I know, right? I'm really happy with how this turned out.
@shmorkobobbable3 жыл бұрын
"It's not the 1960ies anymore" I immediately remember countless conversations or situations to which this would have applied.
@1marcelfilms3 жыл бұрын
i wish it were
@knightlypoleaxe25013 жыл бұрын
@@1marcelfilms Racism is just one problem with the US in the 1960s
@guido24903 жыл бұрын
The road surface difference in the Netherlands really helps as well! In residential areas the streets are usually brick instead of asphalt, which makes drivers "feel" their speed more
@RichardHartl3 жыл бұрын
The winters in Toronto wreak havoc on our roads and I wonder how bricks would respond. There are a very small few sections of Toronto that have brick but it's so small it's barely worth mentioning
@Alacritous3 жыл бұрын
I was looking at the street markings in Amsterdam in the video. Here in Calgary for example, the street markings are invisible for 4 months out of the year as they are covered in snow. What's it like in Amsterdam in the winter?
@wiekeboiten67423 жыл бұрын
@@Alacritous we do this nifty thing called clearing the roads, also we dont solely rely on road markers, like the street design tells you if you have one or multiple lanes or whether there is a bicycle lane.
@trieuwerts3 жыл бұрын
@@RichardHartl There are forms of asphalt concrete that are patterned after brick roads, giving you the feel of a brick road, but the material advantage of asphalt.
@MrAronymous3 жыл бұрын
@@Alacritous Street markings are usually complementary. Other design elements will give visual context. Continuous sidewalks for example legally and physically indicate priority. And interections with traffic lights will have road markings as well as signs, basically a 3 layered back-up. If those all don't apply there's a general rule as well; traffic from the right has the right of way, trams have priority over anyone else.
@nuothe11th2 жыл бұрын
In the US, I actually have noticed a place that consistently does change the road geometry in order to force a slower speed: entrances and exits to US military installations. There are also rumble strips, who I feels use is underutilized
@veestormcourage2 жыл бұрын
That's really true. All over the base, there are tons of speed bumps: the soft ones you can roll over where the speed limit is a little higher, and the ones you have to absolutely crawl over at crossings. And then they use the jersey barriers to create those slaloms in and out to protect the gate guards. Otherwise, it's just too easy to speed. The roads are wide to accommodate all the industrial machines that have to fit through, making it super easy to zip around until you hit a speed bump, and add in demographic shift from the general population to the base and a need for those controls is obvious.
@ooooneeee2 жыл бұрын
When your military is better at building roads then you 😂
@nagizah83 жыл бұрын
My city here in Brazil. Streets with a 50kph limit with tones of potholes and speedbumps. Going higher than 30 is living on the edge
@zimzimph3 жыл бұрын
That's one way to "design" roads :/ Maintenance is very important to keep people safe and traffic flowing.
@Barten00713 жыл бұрын
Didn't Canada make stickers that are looking like holes?
@dkoda8403 жыл бұрын
I saw the videos title and remember what my driving instructor said when I was going for my license, “signs do not stop people but put a building or tree near them and watch them slow down.”
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
Yes, that is exactly correct.
@Gariel20073 жыл бұрын
I also imagine that we've a lot of 'old' roads where the city has grown around it. So you've roads that were designed for cars to go 60-70-80 mph and business and housing have crept up along side them. Now city managers have two choices, Post new signs or completely redesign the road to meet the current reality. Signs are way cheaper and less disruptive and quicker. So signs are what you get. The town I live in recently took on the project of redesigning the roads/streets that run through it. I'm sure it isn't cheap and got dammit if the process and constant construction isn't annoying. But, as things are coming together we can clearly see the benefits.
@traviousandrews10153 жыл бұрын
They can paint narrow lines for the same price as a sign...
@skootties3 жыл бұрын
@@traviousandrews1015 yeah, some of the shown solutions definitely seem to either be just as cheap or come with other benefits
@electrosyzygy3 жыл бұрын
you also avoid blowback from the car addicted; it's often politically unfeasable
@johnwashburn74233 жыл бұрын
If the speed limits are enforced, the signage make sense.
@quillmaurer65633 жыл бұрын
Yeah, a similar issue in the US is a lot of towns/cities along rural highways have a habit of making said rural highway into their main street rather than accepting it as a throughfare. In the past they probably wanted to entice through travelers to stop and shop, but that rarely happens anymore and having through traffic forced through the quaint "old town" pedestrian shopping area is detrimental to both the pedestrian shopping area and the through traffic.
@TheProteanGeek2 жыл бұрын
Here in Australia apparently we go through a very long and detailed process of evaluating risks of all kinds, environment, and road function when determining speed limits. This arbitrary 85% rule just seems entirely insane to me.
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
The new Strong Towns book, Confessions of a Recovering Engineer, is now available. www.confessions.engineer/ Also, Strong Towns' article and video about the 85th percentile speed is here: www.strongtowns.org/journal/2020/7/24/understanding-the-85th-percentile-speed
@imcarlosjr48983 жыл бұрын
Cool
@carfreeneoliberalgeorgisty51023 жыл бұрын
When is your trains part 2 video premiering?
@Barten00713 жыл бұрын
@@johnkeller5163 impact is the accident not a cause of one.
@Barten00713 жыл бұрын
@@johnkeller5163 "Also, driving a car, bike, or even walking should NEVER be "unconscious" or "subconscious" as you suggest with absolute disregard for any road." You didn't understant what he is even talking about.
@Barten00713 жыл бұрын
@@johnkeller5163 Driving responsabilities always demand an alert driver and not this "subconscious" or "unconscious" do you even have a driving licens? They ll tell you can't be ever on high allert. AND WE ARE HUMANS we can't be at high alert all the time.
@Rory-q1u3 жыл бұрын
Love the new intro, nice to see a KZbinr with good graphic design sense
@NotJustBikes3 жыл бұрын
That's was the new editor's idea. I like it! :)
@LilliD33 жыл бұрын
@@NotJustBikes I feel like the bell is copying city beautiful, but I'm not sure what to change it with because it fits here so perfectly.
@LilliD33 жыл бұрын
@@موسى_7 right, but it's still a bell
@grigoriskapr3 жыл бұрын
It took me about a minute to realize that the 85th percentile rule was an actual thing and not a joke... Wow!
@albertbatfinder52403 жыл бұрын
Yep, same here. I’ve never heard of it. It sounds really stupid and could presumably lead to five or six different speed limits. Where I live, there are basically 3 speed limits and you can generally work out what applies to your location without needing signs.
@dlevi673 жыл бұрын
It's actually part of EU recommendations on speed limits too.
@dlevi673 жыл бұрын
@@troyjollimore4100 It is as conveniently old as the US method and research which it adopted... and in the EU it was never implemented. It was a recommendation, not a directive.
@dlevi673 жыл бұрын
@@troyjollimore4100 No, it was not. It was introduced as a formal recommendation in the early 1990s, well after the oil crises of 1973 and 1979. Cars have undoubtedly improved a lot since then too, but there are plenty of cars from the 1970s that remain a pleasure to drive (if not necessarily to sit behind in traffic, given the amount of pollution that they spew out).
@dlevi673 жыл бұрын
@@troyjollimore4100 "It"; the recommendation to use 85th percentile - which is what we are discussing - is one. Speed limits across much of Europe were set from the late 1950s to the early 1970s, well before the recommendation from the EU. Many of them were definitely not set on the basis of "85th percentile", such as the limits on French and Italian motorways (130 and 140 km/h respectively), which were significantly higher than the _maximum_ speed of the typical car in France or Italy back then. Name one 1970s car that was fun to drive? Fiat 124 Sport. Alfa Romeo Spider. Lancia Fulvia HF 1.6. Jaguar E-type. Volkswagen Golf GTI (I & II). Ferrari 246. Just to remain within those I have tested (and I could list at least as many for the 1980s, and for the 1990s). As comfortable, secure, economical, capable as a 2020 car? No, definitely not. But at least as much fun - and possibly more, since the car's limits are that much lower.
@derekmcdonald21682 жыл бұрын
I used to think the speed limit was somehow based on stopping distance if there was a animal or person that came into the road. Great video, hoping we make progress to have better designed transportation systems.
@minifix2 жыл бұрын
I thought it was some complex formula that took into account the road dimensions, curvature, visibility, and brake length in sub-optimal weather conditions. Feel cheated...
@PaulJosephdeWerk2 жыл бұрын
@@minifix That formula is what a person's brain uses while driving. Thus, driving faster that the posted speed limit.
@surfie0073 жыл бұрын
My local council in Australia constantly is lowering speed limits for safety but not doing anything else. Police see it as an opportunity and setup a speed camera van to catch people driving to the road design instead of the speed limit
@knobjockey68823 жыл бұрын
That sounds so typically Australian.
@brianocampo79813 жыл бұрын
which council was this?
@roseduste803 жыл бұрын
Does anyone else have trouble noticing Australian speed signs? They're so bland I often miss them. I like how on the Bruce HWY they have some double stacked, or ringed in fluorescent orange -I didn't miss any of those!
@OMY0053 жыл бұрын
Same in Brisbane. Low hanging fruit syndrome, unfortunately.
@brianocampo79813 жыл бұрын
@@roseduste80 Ringing in fluorescent orange seems to be a Queensland thing imho. Australian speed limit signs are to the same design as the international standards: a number within a red circle. Although if traffic engineers really cared about making sure that drivers are following the speed limit, how the speed sign looks like shouldn't matter at all. If the road was designed properly, the driver should be able to glance at the road and guess (almost to a tee) what the safe speed is - the sign is only just there to 'confirm' your suspicions.
@wiegraf90093 жыл бұрын
"If we paid deliberate attention to everything we did while driving it would be exhausting." lmao this is what driving with ADHD is like, because any lapse in attention could be very dangerous (we have a way higher chance of being in a traffic accident) I am hyper vigilant, even on my meds. It is exhausting and I only really enjoy driving on roads that are inherently challenging and therefore stimulating to drive.
@monkey.moments82723 жыл бұрын
get a car with a manual transmission, constantly changing gears up and down provides enough of a challenge to stimulate me
@wiegraf90093 жыл бұрын
@@monkey.moments8272 Yeah I've heard that helps! I hope to get one soon.
@monkey.moments82723 жыл бұрын
@@wiegraf9009 i recommend getting a 2nd or 1st gen miata, bmw z3/z4, or any honda, they're easy to maintain, reliable, and zippy enough to give you a fun driving experience
@wiegraf90093 жыл бұрын
@@monkey.moments8272 Yes would love to get an MX-5 but I need a parking lot for it. My Lexus is currently taking my parking space so I'd need a second.
@banquetoftheleviathan14043 жыл бұрын
Yeah I prefer to drive through the city if it’s on the highway I’m going to miss a couple exits oh my God it’s the worst shit I’d rather us just have decent public transportation though because someone just stole my catalytic converter out of my element hoo boy
@RossArmer3 жыл бұрын
As someone that moved from Texas to Portland Oregon a few years ago, this is the first thing I noticed about the traffic design. Super interesting to see how obvious it is that we have traffic engineers here following the more European style of controlling speed. I love it and it has sure slowed me down from an aggressive Houston driver to a laidback cruiser who is much more aware of my surroundings.
@coolvania2 жыл бұрын
“They’ll slow down either because they don’t feel safe, or because they’re afraid of damaging their car” You left out a third one: “Or because they see a cop”
@nahuelma973 жыл бұрын
In Euro Truck Simulator 2, whenever I'm going into Amsterdam I hate the road because the limit is 90km/h for trucks but there's a huge zigzag and I always assumed the limit meant the road was actually drivable at that speed, so I basically crashed like 3 different times before understanding I was meant to slow down lmao Edit: doing a random job on the game I just went through Luxembourg and turns out that's where the zigzag is, not Amsterdam, so my bad on this one lol
@ofjeworstlust693 жыл бұрын
the speed limit for trucks is 80 km/h in the Netherlands, in ets2 as well
@davidty20062 жыл бұрын
Hmm also i find it pretty easy to just go into pretty much an autopilot when it comes to highway driving. Like litterally just 12th gear 56 mph (90km/h ish) and turn with the road. And because of that im quite shit at reacting to the random events. City driving and slower speeds i tend to have a better reaction time than highway driving.
@wymarsane73052 жыл бұрын
Hello from LU. We have signs on some curves that indicate a recommended driving speed (distinct from the speed limit in that it's not legally binding), but many of them don't, especially up north. It's always awkward driving on a 90kmh road with an upcoming 180° bend and wondering if you have to slow down to 50 or even maybe 30? And then many people just drive through at 70+ anyway because fuck safety amirite?
@jg65512 жыл бұрын
There’s this small two lane road on the way to my house, 55mph speed limit. There’s a sharp turn at one point and a sign literally directly at the turn where it’s already too late to slow down that says the recommended speed is 30mph. Funny thing is if you are going at the recommended 30mph you are 100% going to accidentally cross into the other lane. If you are going above 40 you are just gonna fly off the road. The road is also heavily used by semi trucks and large vehicles. Very very dangerous but somehow only 1 accident in the past year on it
@quillmaurer65633 жыл бұрын
"Streets are not throughfares" - that's something they get wrong in the US so often. Highway 287 in Colorado is a notorious example, many of the towns along it have it as their main street (in the case of Longmont, the worst offender, literally calls it that), forcing all the through traffic through a low-speed pedestrian shopping area. Much to the detriment of both the shopping area and the through traffic. As for speed limits in the US, I doubt it's based on this 85th percentile thing anymore, in reality it's just about how much money the local sheriff department wants to make in ticket revenue. They have every incentive to design the roads to trick people into going excessively fast while setting a needlessly slow speed limit so they can ticket everyone.
@cdhikes29063 жыл бұрын
What is your proposal to fix the "notorious" Highway 287 through Longmont? Was it designed recently? Was it designed at a time with much fewer people and vehicles on the road? Is a redesign economically feasible, especially since people don't like to increase taxes? I don't know the answer to these questions, but maybe someday you or I (a fellow Coloradan) might be in a position to fix the problem. Better to have a solution than just a problem.
@skateloser40883 жыл бұрын
I drove through there the first time I went to FoCo recently and I was so confused when that happened I was like woah I swore I was on the highway They must've built the town around the highway fifty years ago like Radiator Springs from Cars
@AHungryHunky3 жыл бұрын
Same issues here in PA, the main streets of many small towns are also the main artery traveling through the area wich leads to places that feel very hostile to pedestrians. My town is literally built with one of the worst intersections of two main roadways through the area as part of it's main commercial district. People get mad when I as a driver top out at 15mph driving down the main shopping street in my town, but both sides are often lined with parked cars and with few places to actually cross (and a complete lack of patience on my fellow residents part) people will often just walk out into the street between cars instead of going to the one controlled crossing light on the street. Combine that with the high rent for businesses and it's no wonder why we can't get anything to stay in our storefronts, high rent means higher prices, higher prices+hostile to pedestrian environment means pedestrians are just going to get in their own cars, drive to Walmart where they can buy whatever they where going to buy here cheaper and safer and faster and carry on.
@quillmaurer65633 жыл бұрын
@@skateloser4088 Yeah, I think that's what happened. It was built like this when towns were smaller, through-travelers were more likely to stop in, and more of the town's commerce was based on through-travelers. They wanted to make the main highway into main street as the businesses would serve through-travelers, I think forcing through-travelers through it was on purpose to try to get more business, travelers seeing the businesses and deciding to stop in. But over the decades since a lot of things have changed. Through-travelers less frequently make stops on their journey (especially unplanned ones). There's a hell of a lot more through traffic as the Colorado front range has gotten far more populated. The city of Longmont has grown, making it's economy more based on it's own residents rather than through-travelers, as well as making it a bigger obstacle for through-traffic. The downtown business district has shifted more to serving locals rather than through-travelers, resulting in the through-traffic and pedestrian business area being conflicting needs rather than cooperative. As for the comparison with Radiator Springs, it's sort of the opposite actually. Same origin, but the end result was different. Both were a town and it's central business district growing on a through-highway and it's travelers. Longmont and Highway 287 each outgrew each other, to the point where they're more detriment than benefit to each other. Radiator Springs was the opposite, the town never became self-sustaining without US 66 traveler business. Then a bypassing freeway was built, resulting in far less traffic through the town, and thus business. Thus both town and highway shriveled up into almost nothing. Radiator Springs is fictional of course, but I'm sure there's many similar stories all over the US (and world), particularly along the old Highway 66.
@quillmaurer65633 жыл бұрын
@@cdhikes2906 I agree that it's not an easy problem to fix. All this was built in very different times (see my response to Skate Loser) and the highway, city, and habits of travelers have changed to make this all a detriment instead of benefit as it presumably was originally. As for a fix, I agree there isn't an easy solution. A bypass route would be ideal, turn Main Street into an ideal low-traffic Main Street and route Highway 287 around it. I've seen this done in a few places, the town of Lafayette does this pretty well with Highway 287 - has no businesses or side streets directly on the highway, relatively few traffic lights, and even a side street and pedestrian overpass at one point. The central business district - which is quite nice and quaint, not clogged with through traffic - is elsewhere. Arvada did similar with Wadsworth Boulevard (if you keep going south on Highway 287 without turning this is where you end up, though the designated route of 287 goes elsewhere). The original Wadsworth is two lanes through the central "Olde Town" area, now it doesn't even go through as they permanently turned part of it into a pedestrian area and outdoor dining during the Pandemic. While the main thoroughfare of Wadsworth bypasses that area a couple blocks to the East, also having an underpass under a side street and railroad. This would be the ideal thing to do in Longmont and Fort Collins (possibly Loveland as well, but Loveland isn't quite as bad - still a pretty bad "Stroad" though), but I know that would be very difficult and expensive. Not only building a new section of road, but having to demolish a large amount of existing town, which would be prohibitively expensive and unpopular with residents. One thing that probably helped immensely already was construction of I-25, which handles the majority of intercity traffic along the Front Range, without that Highway 287 would be far worse. But I-25 is fairly far East and thus a much longer route in some situations, and it's often jammed up itself - not to mention eternally under construction. If I could dream of fantasy solutions, what would be best would be to route Highway 287 (and all main roads) underground through cities. Underneath the current route, allowing the current road to be a pedestrian shopping area, parking, and probably a lot of ventilation towers for the highway below. Entry/exit ramps would connect the two, so those on the highway could access the town easily without having to drive through it. This would be prohibitively expensive though. Sort of a weird random thought, I think of that Disney Atlantis movie, the digger (boring machine) Mole drove. We see that thing driving through solid rock at a walking pace - in 1912. Not possible with any technology then or now, but I've pondered how different everything would be if it were, if digging tunnels were that trivial. Underground highways could be built everywhere at low cost, allowing for high-capacity high-speed uninterrupted through-roads (not even intersections as they could be built at different levels) under cities, added benefit of weather not being a problem, with surface streets only serving local traffic, being much quieter, pedestrian-friendly, and safe. Making life so much better both for drivers and life on the surface. Maybe Elon Musk's Boring Company could make that a reality, but I'm not going to hold my breath for that.
@VisualBasic63 жыл бұрын
[Quebec, Canada] The other day I got a speeding ticket for going 70 in a 40. It's a rural road, farmlands all around, horses by the fence.. far up north.. But nah, I miss the sign, it's 40. For no good reason. I didn't mean to go over, but I was told all rural roads here (driving lesson) are to be assumed 70kph 🙃 How fun.
@thrpins84303 жыл бұрын
Thats why the current system works and they don't change it Revenue.
@victorhopper67743 жыл бұрын
the horses turned you in, they demand respect.
@redbarond13 жыл бұрын
Hey, show some respect! How is that rural town supposed to make ANY revenue if they can't fine the pants off of terrible, awful, unsafe speeders like you? /s obviously
@sHmAaa3 жыл бұрын
I live in Quebec, you weren't told that. Stop making excuses and pay attention.
@mercklemore3 жыл бұрын
@@sHmAaa From wikipedia "In most provinces and territories, statutory speed limits are 50 km/h (31 mph) in urban areas, 80 km/h (50 mph) in rural areas." In Manitoba (where I am), that rural speed limit is 90 km/h. i.e. if you turn onto a farm road (many of which have no sign posted anywhere whatsoever) the speed limit is 90. When you enter a city, there will be an "Urban speed area, 50km/h" sign indicating that the speed limit should be assumed to be 50km/h if not posted. Unfortunately, many people in MB have no idea about that 90/50 rule. I wouldn't be at all surprised if quebec has some such rule that you just aren't aware of. I've been a passenger of someone who managed to fight their speeding ticket on those grounds as the speed limit was not posted from the point at which they turned onto the road. I trust the original commenter's story more than you at this point
@UserNameWasCensored2 жыл бұрын
I love this series! I'm amazed at how everything mentioned in the first six episodes concerning roads, streets and stroads - as well as the change in speed limits from 90 to 70 to 50 in rural villages AND running a highway through the middle of the city - is completely applicable to Sweden.
@Jobotubular3 жыл бұрын
"Why not just fire the intern and make sh%t up?" You, my friend, have a future in government bureaucracy -- or at least corporate management
@namenamename3903 жыл бұрын
Your "I'll talk about that in a future video" has become as infamous as CGP Grey's "story for another time"
@baddriversofcolga3 жыл бұрын
I'm right there with ya. I find especially in Ontario that the speed limits feel slow because of how straight and open the roads are in those rural areas that often put you through the charming little towns.
@BicyclesMayUseFullLane3 жыл бұрын
Man, they really gotta re-engineer some of those highways that go straight through the village. You know, put something up more than just speed signs before entering the village, like chicanes, bumps, narrowing of road, etc. Everytime I drive past a village on Highway 7 I got mildly surprised by the village.
@alexxander9662 жыл бұрын
As someone with very high driving anxiety, living in the rural southern US, this channel is slowly but surely convincing me I need to move out of the US entirely
@mublysnubly34072 жыл бұрын
Same. I live in the south and hate driving. This fall I'm going to the capital city in my state for college, and I'm really looking forward to living in a more urban environment; even if it's not that big of a city.
@colemanelectric2 жыл бұрын
Yes please do
@marcuschhoa15123 жыл бұрын
As a relatively new driver trying to be conscious of speeding, literally everyone passes me and goes 10km/h above the speed limit no matter what it is, because they say that's what the max "forgiveness tolerance" of speeding is. It doesn't feel right to just follow their example and maintain the same speed, but at the same time it feels like a risk to drive slower than others.
@jb8888888883 жыл бұрын
Stick to your guns and follow the posted speed limits. I'm 54 and I admit when I was younger I sometimes sped, but for much of my life I've found that posted speed limits are if anything a bit too fast for me. That's the other thing - unless you're coming to a stop or a turn, most people take "SPEED LIMIT" to mean "THE SPEED YOU MUST BE GOING AT ALL TIMES." Like, If the speed limit is 30 and I'm going 25 I get weird looks.
@tadpole92643 жыл бұрын
@@jb888888888 Im a new driver and it took until I was driving on my own for it to really occur to me that the speed limit was actually supposed to be a limit and not just a suggestion I still speed a lot but if its an area where theres gonna be a lot of people I quickly slow down and pay closer attention
@Daniel-dj7fh3 жыл бұрын
For a beginner I have one tip, drive passive and don't give a f** what others might feel if you're driving safe and responsible. People are such clowns on the road sometimes
@Daniel-dj7fh3 жыл бұрын
@@jb888888888 One thing I enjoy alot is driving super late in my area. Nobody is on the road and I can cruise down a 50kmh road with my 40-45 or something, super relaxing
@spencercase53703 жыл бұрын
Relatable. Sometimes I’m caught between “it’s safer to drive the same speed as everyone else, plus I want to get to my destination faster” and “going the speed limit is the right thing to do and influences others to do the same”.
@Geskipt3 жыл бұрын
I have noticed on my trip to the Balkans that Slovenia uses markings on highways you can feel when you drive over them to ensure you're aware of a special situation. I love it. It makes you pay attention.
@gandhirushabh19923 жыл бұрын
I purposefully wait for a week before watching NJB videos because reading the comments, experiences, and anecdotes of viewers is just as much fun and enlightening as watching the video itself.
@Nikki7B2 жыл бұрын
We just started seeing new "street calming" zones in my rural Ontario town. This includes chicane (serpentine-like) curves in the road on and curb bulb-outs (extensions that expand sidewalks or curb lines out into the parking lane to reduce street width. So far I dont think it's going over so well, as there has been an article released that residents have been complaining about them. Lol
@TheHalo14aus3 жыл бұрын
So true how you called regular driving a subconscious activity. Think about how you felt when you first learned how to drive and how emotionally draining it was. Every input you made was deliberate and made you anxious. At least that's what I felt. Now you almost forget how you got to your destination. Like Auto Pilot.
@NeoRetroX3 жыл бұрын
As a German, living in canada I’m triggered everytime I drive and it’s hard to properly communicate that to Canadians. Everything is so poorly designed in comparison and it can drive one nuts.
@youreshouldoflearntgrammer82773 жыл бұрын
As a German
@NeoRetroX3 жыл бұрын
@@youreshouldoflearntgrammer8277 Ja, die capitalization xD
@sm36753 жыл бұрын
@@youreshouldoflearntgrammer8277 Your username ⁉️
@asdax83113 жыл бұрын
And then you have the nutcases like die Grünen & the SPD who plan to introduce a speed limit on the autobahn should they come to power in the upcoming federal election, this month. I shutter imagining such a reality.
@MarkoCloud3 жыл бұрын
Completely agree
@andrewjensen81893 жыл бұрын
Yeah, Vancouver recently lowered the speed limit from 50 km/hr to 30 km/hr on side streets/avenues, but everyone still drives 50+km/hr down wide side streets, so technically everyone is driving at license-revoking speeds. Same with our stroads, 50km/hr speed limit, with 65+km/hr average speed.
@Didntwanttomakeauser3 жыл бұрын
They did? When? How did they communicate it? I live in Richmond and this is the first I've heard of it.
@xavierjunod59673 жыл бұрын
The speed limits don't seem to be enforced here anyways...
@steemlenn87973 жыл бұрын
Everyone is driving at license-revoking speeds? Now, isn't that a possibility right there to insta-change the whole city into a bike street city?
@notlilyspears3 жыл бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 Yeah, start taking away licenses...people will get scared and slow down.
@SkyRocket1593 жыл бұрын
@@xavierjunod5967 only on the sea to sky highway and when they feel like it...
@afrochaltey2 жыл бұрын
As a civil-geotechnical engineer who have been working in transportation projects for many years, I really enjoy your videos.