Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety

There are many interventions that can reduce pedestrian crashes, including clarifying the indications transmitted to the travelers in the traffic network via the built environment. By design, the built environment aims to make who has the right-of-way very clear by presenting expected, easy-to-inter...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baumanis, Carolina
Other Authors: Machemehl, Randy B.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/72708
https://doi.org/10.15781/T2XK85B2V
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spelling ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/72708 2023-05-15T18:06:14+02:00 Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety Baumanis, Carolina Machemehl, Randy B. 2018-12 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2152/72708 https://doi.org/10.15781/T2XK85B2V en eng doi:10.15781/T2XK85B2V http://hdl.handle.net/2152/72708 Pedestrian safety Driver yielding behavior Crossing facilities Marked crosswalks Unmarked crosswalks Thesis text 2018 ftunivtexas https://doi.org/10.15781/T2XK85B2V 2020-12-23T22:23:32Z There are many interventions that can reduce pedestrian crashes, including clarifying the indications transmitted to the travelers in the traffic network via the built environment. By design, the built environment aims to make who has the right-of-way very clear by presenting expected, easy-to-interpret indications. Some environments are much clearer than others, for example a marked crosswalk versus an unmarked crosswalk and can influence yielding behavior and fatal crash probability. This thesis presents the findings on driver yielding toward pedestrians at various crossing treatments and on fatal pedestrian crash incidents in the city of Austin, Texas. Considering both types of data, this thesis aims to achieve a well-rounded quantification of the effect pedestrian control devices have on overall pedestrian safety. From the result of the first component of the investigation, the effect of a flexpost island is not significantly different from the effect of a marked crosswalk on driver yielding propensity. Significant differences were observed between yielding at concrete refuge islands and every other pairwise comparison to flexpost islands, marked crosswalks, and unmarked crosswalks. From the second component, interaction seems to exist between treatment and both sidewalk presence and bus stop presence. The difference in fatality crashes at locations with and without pedestrian crossing treatments is less when there is no sidewalk present. Additionally, the difference between treatment presence on pedestrian fatality percentage is less when there is a bus stop more than 358 ft away. Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering Thesis Refuge Islands The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks Austin Refuge Islands ENVELOPE(-67.166,-67.166,-68.350,-68.350)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivtexas
language English
topic Pedestrian safety
Driver yielding behavior
Crossing facilities
Marked crosswalks
Unmarked crosswalks
spellingShingle Pedestrian safety
Driver yielding behavior
Crossing facilities
Marked crosswalks
Unmarked crosswalks
Baumanis, Carolina
Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
topic_facet Pedestrian safety
Driver yielding behavior
Crossing facilities
Marked crosswalks
Unmarked crosswalks
description There are many interventions that can reduce pedestrian crashes, including clarifying the indications transmitted to the travelers in the traffic network via the built environment. By design, the built environment aims to make who has the right-of-way very clear by presenting expected, easy-to-interpret indications. Some environments are much clearer than others, for example a marked crosswalk versus an unmarked crosswalk and can influence yielding behavior and fatal crash probability. This thesis presents the findings on driver yielding toward pedestrians at various crossing treatments and on fatal pedestrian crash incidents in the city of Austin, Texas. Considering both types of data, this thesis aims to achieve a well-rounded quantification of the effect pedestrian control devices have on overall pedestrian safety. From the result of the first component of the investigation, the effect of a flexpost island is not significantly different from the effect of a marked crosswalk on driver yielding propensity. Significant differences were observed between yielding at concrete refuge islands and every other pairwise comparison to flexpost islands, marked crosswalks, and unmarked crosswalks. From the second component, interaction seems to exist between treatment and both sidewalk presence and bus stop presence. The difference in fatality crashes at locations with and without pedestrian crossing treatments is less when there is no sidewalk present. Additionally, the difference between treatment presence on pedestrian fatality percentage is less when there is a bus stop more than 358 ft away. Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering
author2 Machemehl, Randy B.
format Thesis
author Baumanis, Carolina
author_facet Baumanis, Carolina
author_sort Baumanis, Carolina
title Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
title_short Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
title_full Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
title_fullStr Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
title_sort quantifying the effect of pedestrian control devices on pedestrian safety
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/72708
https://doi.org/10.15781/T2XK85B2V
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.166,-67.166,-68.350,-68.350)
geographic Austin
Refuge Islands
geographic_facet Austin
Refuge Islands
genre Refuge Islands
genre_facet Refuge Islands
op_relation doi:10.15781/T2XK85B2V
http://hdl.handle.net/2152/72708
op_doi https://doi.org/10.15781/T2XK85B2V
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