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Wikipedia

Roundabout

A roundabout is a type of circular intersection or junction in which road traffic is permitted to flow in one direction around a central island, and priority is typically given to traffic already in the junction.[1][2]

Movement within a roundabout in right-hand traffic; note the anticlockwise circulation
Movement within a roundabout in left-hand traffic; note the clockwise circulation

Engineers use the term modern roundabout to refer to junctions installed after 1960 that incorporate various design rules to increase safety.[3][2] Both modern and non-modern roundabouts, however, may bear street names or be identified colloquially by local names such as rotary or traffic circle.

Compared to stop signs, traffic signals, and earlier forms of roundabouts, modern roundabouts reduce the likelihood and severity of collisions greatly by reducing traffic speeds and minimizing T-bone and head-on collisions.[4] Variations on the basic concept include integration with tram or train lines, two-way flow, higher speeds and many others.

For pedestrians, traffic exiting the roundabout comes from one direction, instead of three, simplifying the pedestrian's visual environment. Traffic moves slowly enough to allow visual engagement with pedestrians, encouraging deference towards them. Other benefits include reduced driver confusion associated with perpendicular junctions and reduced queuing associated with traffic lights. They allow U-turns within the normal flow of traffic, which often are not possible at other forms of junction. Moreover, since vehicles that run on gasoline averagely spend less time idling at roundabouts than at signalled intersections, using a roundabout potentially leads to less pollution.[5][6] When entering vehicles only need to give way, they do not always perform a full stop; as a result, by keeping a part of their momentum, the engine will produce less work to regain the initial speed, resulting in lower emissions. Research has also shown that slow-moving traffic in roundabouts makes less noise than traffic that must stop and start, speed up and brake.[7]

Modern roundabouts were first standardised in the UK in 1966 and were found to be a significant improvement over previous traffic circles and rotaries. Since then, modern roundabouts have become commonplace throughout the world,[2]: 2  including Australia, the United Kingdom and France.[6]

History

Origins and demise of traffic circles

Circular junctions existed before roundabouts, including:

Although some may still be (somewhat confusingly) referred to as 'roundabouts', the operating and entry characteristics of these traffic circles differed considerably from modern roundabouts.[14]

Circular intersections were built in the United States, though many were large-diameter 'rotaries' that enabled high-speed merge and weave manoeuvres. Older-style traffic circles may control entering traffic by stop signs or traffic lights. Many allow entry at higher speeds without deflection, or require a stop and a 90-degree turn to enter. Because these circumstances caused a lot of vehicle collisions, construction of traffic circles and rotaries ceased in the 1950s, and some were removed.[15]: 3:02 

1960s development of modern roundabouts

 
The United Kingdom's first roundabout (1909) in Letchworth Garden City

Widespread use of the modern roundabout began when the UK's Transport Research Laboratory engineers re-engineered and standardised circular intersections during the 1960s. Frank Blackmore led the development of the "priority rule" and subsequently invented the mini-roundabout[16][17] to overcome capacity and safety limitations. The priority rule was found to improve traffic flow by up to 10%.[18] In 1966, the United Kingdom adopted a rule at all circular junctions that required entering traffic to give way to circulating traffic. A Transportation Research Board guide reports that the modern roundabout represents a significant improvement, in terms of both operations and safety, when compared with older rotaries and traffic circles.[14] The design became mandatory in the United Kingdom for all new roundabouts in November 1966.[citation needed] Australia and other British-influenced countries were the first outside the UK to build modern roundabouts.[3]

Spread in Europe and North America since 1970s

  • In the 1970s France and Norway adopted the modern roundabout.[19]
  • In 1980 Switzerland had 19 roundabouts.[3]
  • In 1980 Norway had 15 roundabouts.[3]
  • In the early 1980s, single-lane roundabouts (or mini-roundabouts) were also introduced in the Netherlands.[19] It began in the relatively sparsely populated northern and eastern Netherlands because of fears that the roundabouts would not be able to cope with the traffic density of the Randstad; however, when it appeared the single-lane roundabouts had an even higher capacity than signalised intersections, they were constructed en masse in the western Netherlands as well.[19]
  • In 1983 France adopted the yield-at-entry rule on national routes; since then the country's roundabouts have proliferated.[3]
  • In 1985 Norway put up yield signs at the entries to all its roundabouts. After this, safety and traffic flow rapidly improved,[3] and Norwegian roundabouts increased from 15 in 1980, to 350 in 1990, to 500 in 1992.[3]
  • In 1987 Switzerland introduced the yield-at-entry rule; since then its roundabouts increased from 19 in 1980 to 220 in early 1992, while 500 more were being considered.[3]
  • In the late 1980s the Netherlands saw significant growth with about 400 roundabouts constructed in just 6 years.[3] Construction accelerated in the 1990s, and by 2001, there were an estimated 1,500 to 1,800 roundabouts in the Netherlands, more than half of which were located within built-up areas.[19]
  • In 1990 US constructed its first roundabout.
  • In 1991, France was building 1,000 roundabouts every year.[3]
  • As modern roundabouts rose in popularity in the 1980s, the old traffic circles fell out of favour and many were converted into modern roundabouts or other types of intersections.[3]
  • In 1999 Canada built its first modern roundabout.[20]
  • As of the beginning of the 21st century, roundabouts were in widespread use in Europe. For instance:
    • In 2010 France had more than 30,000 roundabouts.[21]
    • There were around 25,000 in the United Kingdom in 2015.[22]

North American introduction since 1990s

 
Modern roundabout in Hughesville, Maryland in 2020
 
Modern roundabout intersection in Murrayville, Langley, British Columbia
 
Roundabout sign in Ontario, Canada

In the United States modern roundabouts emerged in the 1990s after years of planning and educational campaigning by Frank Blackmore and Leif Ourston, who sought to bring the by then well-established increased safety and traffic flow in other countries to America.[15]: 5:03  The very first was constructed in Summerlin, Nevada in the summer of 1990.[3][23] This roundabout occasioned dismay from residents, and a local news program said about it, "Even police agree, [roundabouts] can be confusing at times."[24] Between 1990 and 1995, numerous modern roundabounts were built in California, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Nevada, and Vermont.[3]

 
A roundabout sign in Astoria, Oregon

Municipalities introducing new roundabouts often were met with some degree of public resistance, just as in the United Kingdom in the 1960s.

  • American confusion at how to enter and especially how to exit a roundabout was the subject of mockery such as featured in the film European Vacation (1985).[21][25][15]: 6:45 
  • A 1998 survey of municipalities found public opinion 68% opposed prior to construction, changing thereafter to 73% in favour.[26]
  • A 2007 survey found public support ranging from 22% to 44% prior to construction, and several years after construction was 57% to 87%.[27]
  • By 2011, however, some 3,000 roundabouts had been established, with that number growing steadily.[21][25][15]: 6:45 

In the mid-2010s, about 3% of the then circa 4,000 U.S. modern roundabouts were located in Carmel, Indiana, whose mayor James Brainard had been actively promoting their construction; because of increased safety, injuries caused by car accidents in the city dropped by 80% after 1996.[15]: 0:02  As of December 2015 there were about 4,800 modern roundabouts in the United States.[citation needed] As an example, Washington state contained about 120 roundabouts as of October 2016, all having been built since 1997, with more planned.[28]

The first Canadian modern roundabout was built in 1999. They became increasingly popular amongst traffic planners and civil engineers in the 15 years thereafter due to their success in Europe. By 2014 there were about 400 roundabouts in Canada at the time (most in Quebec, Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario), or one per 90,000 inhabitants (compared to one per 84,000 inhabitants in the United States that year).[20]

Modern roundabout

Roundabout sign examples
 
 
Vienna Convention warning
 
MUTCD warning
 
Give Way
(Yield)
Right-hand traffic shown. Direction arrows are mirrored for left-hand traffic

A "modern roundabout" is a type of looping junction in which road traffic travels in one direction around a central island and priority is given to the circulating flow. Signs usually direct traffic entering the circle to slow and to give way to traffic already on it.[29][30]

Because low speeds are required for traffic entering roundabouts, they are physically designed to slow traffic entering the junction to improve safety, so that the roads typically approach the junction radially; whereas older-style traffic circles may be designed to try to increase speeds, and have roads that enter the circle tangentially.

Roundabouts are normally not used on controlled-access highways because of the low speed requirement, but may be used on lower grades of highway such as limited-access roads. When such roads are redesigned to incorporate roundabouts, traffic speeds must be reduced via tricks such as curving the approaches.

Many traffic circles have been converted to modern roundabouts, including the former Kingston traffic circle in New York and several in New Jersey.[31][32] Others have been converted to signalised intersections, such as the Drum Hill Rotary in Chelmsford, Massachusetts, which is now six lanes wide and controlled by four separate intersections.[33]

Terminology

The word roundabout dates from early 20th-century use in the United Kingdom.[1]

In U.S. dictionaries the terms roundabout, traffic circle, road circle and rotary are synonyms.[34] However, several experts such as Leif Ourston have stressed the need to distinguish between the characteristics of the modern roundabout and the nonconforming traffic circle:[3]

Modern roundabout
  • Entering traffic yields to circulating traffic
  • Entering traffic aims at the centre of the central island and is deflected slowly around it
  • Upstream roadway often flares at entry, adding lanes
Nonconforming traffic circle
  • Entering traffic cuts off circulating traffic
  • Entering traffic aims to one side of the central island (right side for right-hand traffic) and proceeds straight ahead at speed
  • Lanes are not added at entry

The U.S. Department of Transportation adopted the term modern roundabout to distinguish those that require entering drivers to give way to others. Many old traffic circles remain in the northeastern US.[2] Some modern roundabouts are elongated to encompass additional streets, but traffic always flows in a loop.

Rotary

In the United States, traffic engineers typically use the term rotary for large-scale circular junctions between expressways or controlled-access highways. Rotaries of this type typically feature high speeds inside the circle and on the approaches.[35]

In the United States' New England region, however, "rotary" is the general term for all roundabouts, including those with modern designs. State laws in these states mandate that traffic already driving in the rotary always has the right of way. For instance, in Massachusetts, "Any operator of a vehicle entering a rotary intersection shall yield the right-of-way to any vehicle already in the intersection."[36] In Rhode Island entering vehicles "Yield to vehicles in the roundabout."[37]

Other Terms

In the dialect used in the Scottish city of Dundee, circle is used to refer to roundabouts.[38]

In the Channel Islands a third type of roundabout, known as "Filter in Turn", exists. Here approaching drivers neither give way to traffic on the roundabout, as normal, nor have priority over it, but take it in turns to enter from each. Almost all of Jersey's roundabouts are of this type.[39]

In the Philippines, the term rotunda or rotonda is used in referring to roundabouts.

Operation and design

 
One famous roundabout is the Place Charles de Gaulle, Etoile, where 12 avenues come together, drawing a star, which explains the word "étoile", star in French. In the middle of the roundabout is the Arc de Triomphe.
 
A roundabout next to the Elovainio shopping centre in Ylöjärvi, Finland

The fundamental principle of modern roundabouts is that entering drivers give way to traffic within the roundabout without the need for traffic signals. Conversely, older traffic circles typically require circling drivers to give way to entering traffic. Roundabouts may also have an interior lane.[40] Generally, exiting directly from an inner lane of a multi-lane roundabout is permitted, given that the intersecting road has as many lanes as the roundabout. By contrast, exiting from an inner lane of an older traffic circle is usually not permitted and traffic must first move into the outside lane.

Vehicles circulate around the central island in one direction at speeds of 25–40 km/h (15–25 mph). In left-hand traffic countries they circulate clockwise (looking from above); in right-hand traffic, anticlockwise.

Multi-lane roundabouts are typically less than 75 metres (250 ft) in diameter;[41] older traffic circles and roundabout interchanges may be considerably larger. Roundabouts are roughly the same size as signalled intersections of the same capacity.

Design criteria include:

  • Right-of-way: Whether entering or circling vehicles have the right of way. The New Jersey Driver's Manual recommends that, in the absence of flow control signs, traffic yields based on "the circle's historically established traffic flow pattern",[42] and there are no set rules. In New England,[43] Washington, D.C. and New York State,[44] entering traffic yields, as is the norm in virtually all countries outside of the U.S.
  • Angle of entry: Angles range from glancing (tangential) that allow full-speed entry to 90 degree angles (perpendicular).[45] Deflection is required to avoid vehicles entering at excessive speeds.[46]
  • Traffic speed: High entry speeds (over 30 mph or 48 km/h) require circulating vehicles to yield, often stopping, which lowers capacity and increases crash rates compared to modern roundabouts.[47]
  • Lane changes: Allowed or not
  • Diameter: The greater the traffic, the larger the circle.[45]
  • Island function: Parking, parks, fountains, etc.[45]

Islands

 
Roundabout at Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands, with modern art animals on the central island, and an apron that can be used by large trucks.

Modern roundabouts feature a central island and sometimes pedestrian islands at each entry or exit often for decoration.

Denmark has begun widespread adoption of particular high islands, or if not possible, obstacles such as hedges or a ring of trees in larger examples. This is done to further increase the safety benefits of roundabouts, as the obstacles have been found to discomfort drivers more so than the roundabout itself compared to conventional intersections, thus initiating further observation and care taking of the driver. In Denmark, it was found to decrease accidents in roundabouts by -27% to -84% depending on height and type. In studies, heights of 0-0.9, 1-1.9 and 2+ metres were evaluated. It was found that for all heights, especially accidents leading to human injuries were reduced the most, by -47% to -84% for the aforementioned heights.[48] The level of irritation to drivers is not to be understated, as it is the crucial point of the design: to force drivers to pay attention to the sides of the driving direction. This leads to drivers complaining about these designs, as Denmark in most regards embraces designing road infrastructure, such that the wanted driving behaviour leads to comfort i.e., lane width corresponding to speed limit and obstacles encouraging slowdown near points of safety concern such as schools. Such is the controversy for drivers that seasoned drivers teachers complain about this discomfort a decade after its safety is proven and adoption widespread.[49]

Central

 
A fountain dominates this roundabout in Aix-en-Provence, France.

The central island may be surrounded by a truck apron that is high enough to discourage drivers from crossing over it, but low enough to allow wide or long vehicles to navigate the roundabout. The island may provide a visual barrier, to alert approaching drivers to the presence of the roundabout, and to encourage drivers to focus on the traffic in the path of the circle. A visual barrier significantly reduces the accident rate.[50] Otherwise, vehicles anywhere in or near the circle can cause those entering to stop and wait for them to pass, even if they are opposite, which unnecessarily reduces traffic flow. The barrier may be a landscaped mound, a raised wall, a tree or tall shrubs. Road signage or flagpoles may be erected at the top of a landscaped mound.

Some communities use the island for monuments, the display of large public art or for a fountain. Pedestrians may be prohibited from crossing the circling lane(s). Access to the central island requires an underpass or overpass for safety.

Art installations

Roundabouts have attracted art installations around the world:

Pedestrian

 
This roundabout in Shanghai, China, has a pedestrian bridge in the form of another, raised roundabout.

For larger roundabouts, pedestrian islands at each entry/exit encourage drivers to slow and prepare to enter the circle. They also provide a refuge where pedestrians may pause mid-crossing. Vehicles or bicycles entering or exiting the roundabout must yield to all traffic including pedestrians.[61]

Pedestrian crossing

Pedestrian crossings at each entry/exit may be located at least one full car length outside the circle. The extra space allows pedestrians to cross behind vehicles waiting to enter the circle, and to allow exiting vehicles to stop for pedestrians without obstruction. Each pedestrian crossing may traverse a pedestrian island for protection that also forces drivers to slow and begin to change direction, encouraging slower, safer speeds. On the island, the pedestrian crossing may become diagonal, to direct the gaze of those crossing into exiting traffic.

Bicycles

Physically separated bikeways best protect cyclists.[62][63][64] Less optimally, terminating cycle lanes well before roundabout entrances requires cyclists to merge into the stream of motor traffic, but keeps cyclists in full view of drivers, at some cost in motor vehicle speed. Cyclists may also be permitted to use pedestrian crossings.

Traditional cycle lanes increase vehicle–bicycle collisions. When exiting, a motorist must look ahead to avoid colliding with another vehicle or with pedestrians on a pedestrian crossing. As the intersection curves away from the exit, the path of an exiting vehicle is relatively straight, and so the motorist may often not slow substantially. To give way to a cyclist on the outside requires the exiting motorist to look toward the rear, to the perimeter. Other vehicles can obstruct the driver's view in this direction, complicating the motorist's task. The more frequent requirements for motorists to slow or stop reduce traffic flow. A 1992 study[65] found that the risk to cyclists is high in all such intersections, but much higher when the junction has a marked bicycle lane or sidepath around its perimeter.[66][67] Cycle lanes were installed at Museum Road, Portsmouth, but were replaced by a narrowed carriageway to encourage lane sharing.

The roundabout at the Brown Road and Loop 202 interchange in Mesa, Arizona, adopts a U.S.-recommended design.[68] On-street pavement markings direct cyclists to enter the sidewalk at the end of the bike lane. Cyclists who choose to travel on the wide sidewalk, cross roundabout arms perpendicularly, well outside the circle. A pedestrian island allows pedestrians and cyclists to cross one lane at a time.

Capacity and delays

 
Traffic approaching Chiverton Cross roundabout in Cornwall, UK

The capacity of a roundabout varies based on entry angle, lane width, and the number of entry and circulating lanes. As with other types of junctions, operational performance depends heavily on the flow volumes from various approaches. A single-lane roundabout can handle approximately 20,000–26,000 vehicles per day, while a two-lane design supports 40,000 to 50,000.[63]

Under many traffic conditions, a roundabout operates with less delay than signalised or all-way stop approaches. Roundabouts do not stop all entering vehicles, reducing both individual and queuing delays. Throughput further improves because drivers proceed when traffic is clear without waiting for a signal to change.

Roundabouts can increase delays in locations where traffic would otherwise often not be required to stop. For example, at the junction of a high-volume and a low-volume road, traffic on the busier road would stop only when cross traffic was present, otherwise not having to slow for the roundabout. When the volumes on the roadways are relatively equal, a roundabout can reduce delays, because half of the time a full stop would be required. Dedicated left turn signals (in countries where traffic drives on the right) further reduce throughput.

Roundabouts can reduce delays for pedestrians compared to traffic signals, because pedestrians are able to cross during any safe gap rather than waiting for a signal. During peak flows when large gaps are infrequent, the slower speed of traffic entering and exiting can still allow crossing, despite the smaller gaps.

Studies of roundabouts that replaced stop signs and/or traffic signals found that vehicle delays were reduced 13–89 percent and the proportion of vehicles that stopped was reduced 14–56 percent. Delays on major approaches increased as vehicles slowed to enter the roundabouts.[6]

Roundabouts have been found to reduce carbon monoxide emissions by 15–45 percent, nitrous oxide emissions by 21–44 percent, carbon dioxide emissions by 23–37 percent and hydrocarbon emissions by 0–42 percent. Fuel consumption was reduced by an estimated 23–34 percent.[6]

Capacity modelling

Many countries have researched roundabout capacity. The software can help calculate capacity, delay and queues. Packages include ARCADY, Rodel, Highway Capacity Software and Sidra Intersection. ARCADY and Rodel are based on the Transport Research Laboratory mathematical model. The TRL approach is derived from empirical models based on geometric parameters and observed driver behaviour with regard to lane choice. Sidra Intersection software includes roundabout capacity models developed in Australia and the US.

Research on Australian roundabouts was conducted in the 1980s at the Australian Road Research Board (ARRB).[69] Its analytical capacity and performance models differ from the TRL model significantly, following a lane-based gap-acceptance theory including geometric parameters.

Research on U.S. roundabouts sponsored by the Transportation Research Board (TRB) and Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) culminated in a capacity model that was included in the Highway Capacity Manual (HCM) Edition 6[70] and the TRB-FHWA Roundabout Informational Guide (NCHRP Report 672).[71] The HCM Edition 6 model is based on lane-based gap-acceptance theory. A recent NCHRP survey of US state transport agencies found that Sidra Intersection is the most widely used software tool in the US for roundabout analysis.[72]

Safety

 
A comparison of possible collision points on a roundabout versus a traditional intersection
 
Small modern roundabout in the United States, where vehicles are driven on the right
 
Roundabout in the United States with separated side lanes. Vehicles entering the roundabout give way to vehicles in the roundabout.
 
A typical trunk road roundabout in the UK at Carland Cross on the A30 in Cornwall, United Kingdom. There is a free-flow lane for the A30 towards Bodmin (nearest the camera).

Statistically, modern roundabouts are safer for drivers and pedestrians than both older-style traffic circles and traditional intersections.[73] Compared with these other forms of intersections, modern roundabouts experience 39% fewer vehicle collisions, 76% fewer injuries and 90% fewer serious injuries and fatalities (according to a study of a sampling of roundabouts in the United States, when compared with the junctions they replaced).[74] At junctions with stop signs or traffic lights, the most serious accidents are right-angle, left-turn or head-on collisions where vehicles move fast and collide at high impact angles, e.g. head-on. Roundabouts virtually eliminate those types of crashes. Instead, most crashes are glancing blows at low angles of impact.[75][76] Further, a study based on satellite imagery of all intersections in Australia observed consistently low speeds on roundabouts compared to other intersection types, contributing to reduced injury severity in case of a crash.[77]

Some larger roundabouts take foot and bicycle traffic through underpasses or alternate routes. However, an analysis[78] of the New Zealand national crash database[79] for the period 1996–2000 shows that 26% of cyclists reported injury crashes happened at roundabouts, compared to 6% at traffic signals and 13% at priority controlled junctions. The New Zealand researchers propose that low vehicle speeds, circulatory lane markings and mountable centre aprons for trucks can reduce the problem.[80] The most common roundabout crash type for cyclists, according to the New Zealand study, involves a motor vehicle entering the roundabout and colliding with a cyclist who already is travelling around the roundabout (more than half of cyclist/roundabout crashes in New Zealand fall into this category). The next most common crash type involves motorists leaving the roundabout colliding with cyclists who are continuing farther around the perimeter.

Vision-impaired pedestrians

Poorly designed walkways increase risks for the vision-impaired, because it is more difficult than at a signalised intersection to audibly detect whether there is a sufficient gap in traffic to cross safely. At a signalised intersection, traffic comes to a stop, and an audible sound can be generated to indicate that it is time to cross.[81]

This issue has led to a conflict in the United States between the vision-impaired and civil engineering communities. One solution is to provide manually-operated pedestrian crossing signals at each entry. This increases construction and operation costs, and requires some way to disrupt traffic long enough for the pedestrian to cross (such as a HAWK beacon) that defeats the purpose of the roundabout. Signalisation also increases delays for most pedestrians during periods of light traffic, since pedestrians need to wait for a signal to change before (legally) crossing.[82]

Signalised pedestrian crossings are normally used on large-diameter roundabout interchanges rather than small-diameter modern roundabouts.

Types of circular intersections

Large roundabouts, such as those used at motorway junctions, typically have two to six lanes and may include traffic lights to regulate flow.

Some roundabouts have a divider or subsidiary deflection island, by means of which is provided a "free flow" segregated left- (or right-) turn lane (for the UK see Design Manual for Roads and Bridges TD 51/03) between traffic moving between two adjacent roads, and traffic within the roundabout, enabling drivers to bypass the roundabout.

Gyratory system

The term "gyratory" (for example, Hanger Lane gyratory) is sometimes used in the United Kingdom for a large circular intersection with non-standard lane markings or priority arrangements, or where there are significant lengths of carriageway between the entry arms, or when buildings occupy the central island.[83]

In the 21st century several gyratory systems in London have been removed, including Tottenham Hale[84] and Elephant and Castle.

Smaller, small and mini- roundabouts

 
A small roundabout in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

As the overall or external size of a roundabout (in the UK referred to as the Inscribed Circle Diameter – ICD) is reduced, so the maximum practicable (and prescribed) diameter for the central island is also reduced, whilst the width of the circulatory carriageway increases (due to the greater width of vehicle swept path at smaller turning radii). In most cases, this results in it being too easy – certainly when traffic is light relative to capacity – for drivers to traverse the roundabout at relatively high speed, with scant regard for road markings or the potential dangers to self or conflicts with other road users. To mitigate this risk, a proportion of the circulatory carriageway – an annulus around the central island – is segregated from general use by demarcation lines and differentiated from the outer annulus of the carriageway by a combination of a slightly raised surface, adverse crossfall, contrasting colours and textures and demarcating lines. The effect of this is to discourage drivers from taking a more direct path through the roundabout, their line of least resistance is more tightly curved (and therefore slower) but more bearable. The inner annulus provides for the trailing axles of longer or articulated vehicles to sweep across the inner annulus, which is therefore known as an over-run area (in UK usage), truck apron, or mountable apron.

The smaller the roundabout, the more such mitigation measures are likely to be abused – the less effective they will be. In the UK the minimum size for roundabouts with raised islands is 28 metre diameter ICD with a 4-metre diameter island. This threshold being driven primarily by vehicle geometry – which is globally relatively consistent – rather than driver behaviour, it is adopted in other jurisdictions too. Below this minimum size, the mini-roundabout prevails.

Mini-roundabouts

After developing the offside priority rule, Frank Blackmore, of the UK's Transport Research Laboratory, turned his attention to the possibility of a roundabout that could be built at sites lacking room for a conventional roundabout.[85]

 
Roundabout in rural Qatar

Mini-roundabouts can incorporate a painted circle or a low dome but must be fully traversable by vehicles. Motorists can drive over them when there is no other traffic, but it is dangerous to do so otherwise. Once the practice is established it may be difficult to discourage. Mini-roundabouts use the same right-of-way rules as standard roundabouts but produce different driver behaviour. Mini-roundabouts are sometimes grouped in pairs (a double mini-roundabout) or in "chains", simplifying navigation of otherwise awkward junctions. In some countries road signs distinguish mini-roundabouts from larger ones.

Mini-roundabouts are common in the UK, Ireland and Hong Kong (particularly on Hong Kong Island), as well as Irapuato in Mexico.

In the UK and also in other jurisdictions that have adopted mini-roundabouts, to drive across the central disc or dome when it is practicable to avoid it is an offence. Vehicles are required to treat the painted circle as if it were a solid island and drive around it.[86] Some local authorities paint double white lines around the circle to indicate this, but these require permission from the Secretary of State for Transport. The central dome also must be able to be overrun by larger vehicles.

In the UK – and also in other highway jurisdictions – the maximum size for a mini roundabout is 28 metre (30 yard) ICD (inscribed circle diameter).

Raindrop roundabouts

These roundabouts do not form a complete circle and have a "raindrop" or "teardrop" shape. They have also been used at bowtie intersections, replacing traffic signals that are inefficient without a turning lane. In addition to their use at intersections, raindrop roundabouts are also used in dogbone interchanges (described below).

Balcony roundabout

A balcony roundabout is just an elevated roundabout. They are constructed in such a way that vulnerable road users can cross underneath the roundabout. Footpaths and cycle paths along the different roads connect to the square under the roundabout. Vulnerable road users do not interfere with motorised traffic on the roundabout, reducing the risk of collision.

Turbo roundabouts

 
A much applied turbo roundabout design in the Netherlands

In the Netherlands, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the United Kingdom, Finland, Spain, Poland, Hungary, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, North Macedonia and Croatia a relatively new type of two-lane roundabout designs is emerging, called "turbo roundabouts". These designs require motorists to choose their direction before entering the roundabout, thereby eliminating many conflicting paths and choices on the roundabout itself so that traffic safety is increased, as well as speed and capacity. These designs, seen from above, typically result in a spiralling flow of traffic, giving them the collective name of turbo roundabouts. As a minor drawback turbo roundabouts are often marked out such that a U-turn by means of the roundabout is not possible for drivers approaching on certain arms.

Several variations of turbo roundabouts exist. They are frequently designed for the intersection of a major road crossing a road with less traffic.

An early application of the principle was a six-arm and therefore relatively large (and fast) non-circular roundabout at Stairfoot, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, which was given spiral marking about 1984. At that time the method was considered experimental and needed special consent from central authorities. The turbo roundabout was formally developed in 1996 in the Netherlands by Lambertus Fortuijn, a researcher from the Delft University of Technology.[87] Similar roundabouts, with spiralling lane markings, have been used for many years in the UK e.g. the A176/A127 (eastbound) at Basildon, Essex (51°33′41″N 0°27′11″E / 51.561399°N 0.452934°E / 51.561399; 0.452934). However, it was not until 1997 that the UK's national highway authorities published guidance (DMRB TA-78/97) that in effect endorsed the use of spiral markings in certain circumstances.

Turbo roundabouts can be built with raised lane separators (common in the Netherlands[88]) or with lane markings only. The use of raised lane separators prevents road users from weaving (thereby reducing conflicts) but can make manoeuvring more difficult for large vehicles.

 
A comparison between a two-lane roundabout and a turboroundabout showing possible collision points.

According to simulations, a two-lane roundabout with three exits should offer 12–20% greater traffic flow than a conventional, three-lane roundabout of the same size. The reason is reduced weaving that makes entering and exiting more predictable. Because there are only ten points of conflict (compared with 8 for a conventional single lane roundabout, or between 32 and 64 with traffic signal control), this design is often safer as well. Research and experiments show that traffic accidents are reduced by 72% on turbo roundabouts compared to multi-lane roundabouts, which have 12 points of conflict.[89] Research at Windesheim University also shows that turbo roundabouts reduce accidents including casualties by some 75% when compared to regular intersections, and by 61% compared to single-lane roundabouts.[90] The same research made it very clear that it is safer for cyclists not to have priority over motor vehicles on the roundabout, than to have it.[90] At least 70 have been built in the Netherlands, while many turbos (or similar, lane splitting designs) can be found in southeast Asia.[91] Multi-lane roundabouts in the United States of America are typically required to be striped with spiral markings,[92] as most states follow the federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices.

Sub-sea roundabouts

A new development is the roundabout below the seabed, in locations where multiple undersea traffic tunnels join. The first such roundabout is in the Eysturoy Tunnel (Eysturoyartunnilin), opened in December 2020 in the Faroe Islands. It connects the main island Streymoy with two locations on the island Eysturoy that are separated by a long fjord, Skálafjørður. So, three roads meet at this roundabout. Total length of the system is 11.24 km (6.98 mi). It was the largest ever infrastructure project in the Faroe Islands, estimated to have cost around a billion DKK.[93]

Motorways

 
Motorway junction with roundabout near Opatovice nad Labem, Czech Republic

Roundabouts are generally not appropriate for placement on motorway or freeway mainlines because the purpose of such facilities is to provide for uninterrupted traffic flow. However, roundabouts are often used for the junction between the slip roads (called ramps in North America) and the intersecting road. A single roundabout, grade separated from the mainlines, may be used to create a roundabout interchange. This type of junction is common in the UK and Ireland.

Alternatively, separate roundabouts also may be used at the slip road intersections of a diamond interchange to create what often is referred to as a "dumbbell interchange", which is increasingly common in both Europe and North America due to its reduced need for wide or multiple bridges. A variation of the dumbbell interchange, often called a "dogbone interchange", occurs when the roundabouts do not form a complete circle but are instead raindrop roundabouts (described above). This configuration reduces conflicts between vehicles entering the raindrop roundabouts from the ramps, reducing queueing and delays, compared with the dumbbell interchange.

Additional use of roundabouts for high-speed junctions is the 3-level stacked roundabout—this is a roundabout interchange where both of the roadway mainlines are grade separated. In the United Kingdom, the M25/A3, M8/M73 and A1(M)/M18 interchanges are examples of this type. These junctions, however, have less capacity than a full free-flow interchange. A similar design to this is the three-level diamond interchange.

Most junctions on Dublin's M50 motorway C-road were built using a standard roundabout interchange. The traffic volume of several of these junctions increased to a level higher than the capacity such roundabouts can accommodate, and in turn, have been converted into partially or fully free-flowing interchanges. One example is the Red Cow interchange. In Northern Ireland, the junction between the M1 and M12 (Craigavon connector motorway) is via a standard roundabout with a raised centre, three onslips and three offslips, and two lanes.

In the city of Malmö, Sweden, a roundabout connects two motorways, E22 from Lund, and the Inner ring road.

In the Netherlands, A6 motorway and A7 motorway used to cross near Joure using a roundabout until October 2017, when the junction was turned into a full Y-interchange.[94] The junction between the A200 and the A9 uses a 3-level stacked roundabout. Near Eindhoven (the Leenderheide junction), the junction for the A2 uses a roundabout. An overpass was built for the A67 from Antwerp to Germany.

Near Liège, Belgium, the Cheratte interchange between the A3/E40 and A25/E25 functions partially as a roundabout, with through traffic allowed to continue without entering the junction and traffic changing between motorways required to use the roundabout.

Rotary interchanges operate with traffic circles rather than roundabouts. Rotary interchanges are common in New England, particularly in the state of Massachusetts, but a European example of a rotary interchange may be found in Hinwil, Switzerland.

Signalised roundabouts

 
A major signal-controlled roundabout interchange in central Bristol, England. Vehicles drive on the left, and vehicles in the roundabout are stopped by traffic lights to allow other vehicles to enter, while an underpass permits straight-through traffic to bypass the roundabout entirely.

A signalised roundabout is one where one or more entry is controlled by traffic signals, rather than by assumed priority. For each signalised entry there will also be a signalised stopline immediately upstream on the circulatory section. The signals prevent blocking on the roundabout, and balance and improve traffic capacity.[95]

Examples include the M50 in Dublin, the Cherry Street roundabout in Kowloon, Hong Kong, Sheriffhall Roundabout in Edinburgh, Scotland, Newton Circus in Singapore, and many of the roundabouts along the Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City.

An evolution of the signalised roundabout has been proposed recently.[96] It is based in avoiding stops by eliminating conflict points in roundabouts. This proposed new paradigm (SYROPS) forms platoons of vehicles (e.g. 2 x 3 cars) that arrive at the roundabout with speed identical to the average circulation speed in the roundabout and within the time interval (visualised as a rotating priority sector) assigned to his entrance, avoiding all the conflicts of passage and with it the stops and accelerations required in standard and in signalled roundabouts. Signalling signage is with lights for human drivers and optionally wireless for connected and autonomous vehicles.[undue weight? ]

"Magic" roundabouts/ring junctions

"Magic roundabouts" direct traffic in both directions around the central island. They are officially known as "ring junctions". The first magic roundabout was constructed in 1972 in Swindon, Wiltshire, United Kingdom, designed by Frank Blackmore,[97] inventor of the mini-roundabout. The roundabout joins five roads and consists of a two-way road around the central island, with five mini-roundabouts meeting the incoming roads.[98]

The name derives from the popular children's television series, The Magic Roundabout, and is considered "magic" because traffic flows in both clockwise and anticlockwise directions. This is achieved by surrounding the main island with one smaller roundabout per entry/exit street. This pattern directs traffic in the usual clockwise (in LHT installations) or counter-clockwise (in RHT installations) manner around each mini-roundabout. Exiting the mini-roundabouts, traffic may proceed around the central island either in the usual direction (via the outer loop), or in the inverse direction (the inner loop). The arrangement offers multiple paths between feeder roads. Drivers typically choose the shorter, most fluid route. Although the safety record is good,[99] many drivers find this system intimidating, and some drivers go to great lengths to avoid them.[100][101][102]

Similar systems are found in the Moor End roundabout in Hemel Hempstead (Hertfordshire), which has six intersections; in High Wycombe (Buckinghamshire),[103] the Denham Roundabout in Denham (Buckinghamshire), the Greenstead Roundabout in Colchester (Essex), "The Egg" in Tamworth (Staffordshire) and the Hatton Cross Roundabout in London.[104]

Churchbridge Junction in Staffordshire is a magic gyratory. This type of junction is similar to a magic roundabout, except that the constituent roundabouts are connected by longer lengths of roadway.[105]

Dutch-style roundabouts for bicycles and pedestrians

 
Dutch-style roundabout

Dutch roundabouts are designed to give cyclists priority over motorists. Cyclists have an outer ring on the roundabout, with cycle crossings over each of the four approach roads in a contrasting red surface. There are also zebra crossings over each approach road for pedestrians.[106]

Reduced lane widths on the roundabout and at exit and entry points are designed to encourage drivers to slow down.[107]

 
Near Nationaltheatret in Oslo, tramways cross the roundabout

Trams

Tram roundabouts, which are found in many countries, merge roundabouts for individual vehicles with tram lines. Large areas are needed for tram roundabouts that include a junction between tram lines. Such systems often contain tram stops. Tramways usually cross at the centre of the roundabout. This requires traffic lights or special signalling granting the trams priority. However, there are also roundabouts where trams and vehicles use the same lane. Some roundabouts have a tram stop on the island.

  • In France, tram roundabouts commonly have radii between 14 and 22 metres, although some have radii outside this range.[108]
  • In some cities, the tramway bisects the roundabout. The French Cerema [fr] considers that the mix of priorities makes these confusing and difficult to understand: a traditional modern roundabout gives the priority to the central ring, while tram roundabouts give priority to the central ring but higher priority still to the tramway. This generates many collisions of cars and trams, between 7 and 10 for each tram roundabout in France between 2006 and 2015 (between 0.37 and 1.01 per year).[108][contradictory]
  • In inner Melbourne, particularly in the inner suburban area of South Melbourne, where the tram network is extensive, tram tracks always pass through the central island, with drivers required to give way to vehicles approaching from their right and to trams approaching from right angles. The Haymarket roundabout between Royal Parade and Elizabeth Street contains a tram-stop, pedestrian crossings, three entering tram lines, traffic signals to stop vehicular traffic at each crossing point when a tram is due, service roads and a pedestrian crossing.
  • Brussels tram roundabouts employ multiple configurations. At the Barrière de St-Gilles (Dutch: Bareel St-Gillis), tram tracks form a circle in the carriageway, while Verboekhoven and Altitude Cent (Hoogte Honderd) have reserved tram tracks inside the roundabout. At Place Stéphanie (Stefaniaplein), they go straight through the centre, with a slip track up the Chaussée de Charleroi (Charleroisesteenweg), while at Montgomery they tunnel underneath.
  • In Dublin, Ireland, the Red Cow interchange at the N7/M50 junction is grade-separated and is signal-controlled with secondary lanes (separate from the main roundabout) for those making left turns. The junction, the busiest in Ireland, had tram lines added to it with the opening of the Luas system in 2004. The tracks pass across one carriageway of the N7, and across the southern M50 sliproads. Trams pass every five minutes at rush hour. The roundabout was replaced with a grade-separated free flowing junction.
  • Gothenburg, Sweden has a tram roundabout and tram stop at Korsvägen (the Crossroad). It carries heavy road traffic and about one tram or bus per minute passes in each direction. This is further complicated by separated rights-of-way for trams and buses and the fact that it is one of the busiest interchanges in the city. Another is located at Mariaplan in the inner suburb of Majorna. The trams make a right turn, giving the roundabout an odd design.
  • In Warsaw, trams typically cross straight through roundabouts and have junctions in the centre of them. In Wrocław, Poland, trams pass through the Powstańców Śląskich Roundabout, stopping in the roundabout (north-headed track).
  • The Silesian tram network in Poland has two tram roundabouts. In the city centre of Katowice, the tram line passes through the centre of the Ziętka Roundabout in a north–south alignment, with a tram stop in the centre of the circle.[a] In Będzin, unusually, the tram junction itself forms a circular roundabout, with trams going around the circle; there are tram stops immediately outside the roundabout on each branch.
  • In Vítězné náměstí (Victory Square) in Prague, Czech Republic, a tramway crosses the carriage way of the roundabout at three places. Entering as well as leaving trams give way to vehicles. In the years 1932–42 trams circulated much like vehicles.[109]
  • In Kyiv, Ukraine an interchange of two "fast tram" lines is below a roundabout.
  • Oslo, Norway also has many roundabouts with tram tracks passing through; for example at Bislett, Frogner plass, Sinsen, Solli plass, Carl Berners plass and Storo.
  • In Wolverhampton, England, the West Midlands Metro tram passes through the centre of a roundabout on the approach to its terminus at St Georges. This also happens in New Addington in Croydon on the Tramlink north of King Henry's Drive tram stop on Old Lodge Lane at the junction to King Henry's Drive.
  • In Sheffield, England the Sheffield Supertram systems crosses two major roundabouts. At the Brook Hill roundabout near Sheffield University, the tramway passes underneath the roundabout in a subway, while at Park Square in the city centre it travels above the roundabout on bridges and viaducts with a junction in the central island.
  • A roundabout in southern Zagreb, Croatia features tram tracks passing through, curving at a 90° angle, as well as a full tram mini-roundabout inside the middle road island. In Croatia, where tram tracks enter the road without traffic lights, trams have the highest priority and other non-emergency vehicles are required to yield.
  • In Salt Lake City, Utah a light rail line on the south side of the University of Utah crosses a roundabout where Guardsman Way meets South Campus Drive. Like virtually all rail crossings in the United States, both crossings in the circle are equipped with boom barriers.
  • In Kassel, Germany, Lines 4 and 8 pass through the centre of the roundabout at Platz der Deutschen Einheit. The tram stops are in the centre of the roundabout. Roundabout traffic is controlled by traffic lights. Pedestrian access is via subway and street-level crossings at the lights.
  • In Bremen, Germany, tram lines 8 and 6 pass through the centre of the roundabout "Am Stern" east of the main railway station. They enter from the west and exit in a northeastern direction, thus making a slight bend within the roundabout. Both stations are situated on the north-eastern edge of the roundabout. Traffic is controlled by two-colour traffic lights inside the roundabout.

Railways

 
The Main North Line railway bisects the State Highway 1/Main Street roundabout in Blenheim, New Zealand.

In Jensen Beach, Florida, the main line of the Florida East Coast Railway running north–south bisects the two-lane roundabout at the junction of Jensen Beach Boulevard running east–west. It hosts three other roads and the service entrance to a large shopping plaza. Boom barriers line the railway crossings. The landscaped central island bisected by the tracks was originally curbed/kerbed, but 18-wheelers had trouble negotiating the roundabout, so the curbs were replaced with painted concrete strips. The roundabout was built in the early 2000s and improved traffic flow, although long freight trains often cause delays.[110][111]

Two roundabouts in the Melbourne metropolitan area, Highett, Victoria[112] and Hampton,[113] have heavy rail crossing the roundabout and through the inner circle. Boom barriers protect the railway from oncoming traffic at the appropriate points in the roundabout.

At the Driescher Kreisel[114] in Bergisch Gladbach, Germany, a railway serving a nearby paper factory crosses a roundabout located next to a shopping centre and pedestrian zone. The flow of traffic and pedestrians is governed by 14 barriers, 22 traffic lights and 8 loudspeakers. The barriers close three times daily for 7 minutes to allow trains to pass.

In New Zealand's South Island, two roundabouts join major roads where a railway cuts through. One is at the intersection between State Highway 1 (as Sinclair Street and Main Street from the east) and Main Street (from the west), Park Terrace and Redwood Street in the city of Blenheim. Here the Main North Line bisects the roundabout and separates Park Terrace and Main Street eastbound from the rest of the roundabout.[115] The other roundabout is located at Kumara Junction on the West Coast, where the Hokitika Branch separates State Highway 6 southbound from SH 6 northbound and SH 73.[116] Both roundabouts are controlled by flashing red lights, with additional boom barriers at the Blenheim roundabout.

Through roundabout

Also known as a hamburger roundabout, these junctions are signalised and have a straight-through section of carriageway for one of the major routes. The hamburger name derives from the fact that the plan view resembles the cross-section through a hamburger. The United Kingdom has examples on the A580 East Lancashire Road in St Helens, on Haydock Island in Merseyside[117] (which also features the M6 passing overhead), and on the Astley/Boothstown border.[118] More examples are the A6003 at Kettering, the A538 near Manchester Airport, the "Showcase" junction on A329 at Winnersh, Berkshire[119] and the A63/A1079 Mytongate junction in Hull. Examples also exist in Bracknell, Hull,[120] Bramcote in Nottinghamshire and Reading, as well as on the N2/M50 intersection in Dublin, Ireland. In Perth, Western Australia, one is found at the intersection of Alexander Drive, Morley Drive and The Strand.[121] Throughabouts are very common in Spain, where they are called raquetas (Spanish for "[tennis] racket") or glorieta/rotonda partida ("split roundabout").[122]

Only bicycle-pedestrian roundabouts

The same features that make roundabouts attractive for roadway junctions led to their use at junctions of multi-use trails.

The University of California, Davis[123][original research?] and Stanford University, as well as the Cape Cod and Old Colony rail trails have bicycle-pedestrian roundabouts. A roundabout along the Clear Creek Trail in Bloomington, Indiana, connects the main trail to its spur.

Roundabouts are used on off-road bicycle trails in Florida, Colorado, Alaska, and Wisconsin.[124][125][126]

An elevated roundabout is located in Eindhoven, serving pedestrian and bicycle traffic only, above the main conventional roadway intersection. It is known as the Hovenring.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ There is also a branch line immediately north of the roundabout going west, and an additional tram stop on that branch.

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Sources

  • U.S. Department of Transportation (2013). "Roundabouts: an Informational Guide" (PDF).
  • Stenquist, Paul (20 August 2020). "All About Roundabouts". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 August 2020.

External links

  • City of Carmel, Indiana, USA, Roundabouts page (showing raindrop roundabouts or dogbone interchanges)
  • Car Free America Roundabout Safety and Design Guide
  • Video of Highway Roundabout in Canada
  • TRL, The UK's Transport research Laboratory
  • Modern Roundabouts – Geocoded National Database
  • Mini-roundabouts – Getting them Right
  • Roundabout Benefits from the Washington State Department of Transportation
  • Highway Roundabouts from the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario
  • Benefits of a Turboroundabout
  • Modern Roundabout Practice in the United States from Transportation Research Board
  • Proceedings from the Transportation Research Board Standing Committee on Roundabouts (ANB75)

roundabout, this, article, about, road, junction, other, uses, disambiguation, rotary, disambiguation, traffic, circle, redirects, here, glaciated, area, antarctica, traffic, circle, antarctica, roundabout, type, circular, intersection, junction, which, road, . This article is about the road junction For other uses see Roundabout disambiguation and Rotary disambiguation Traffic circle redirects here For the glaciated area in Antarctica see Traffic Circle Antarctica A roundabout is a type of circular intersection or junction in which road traffic is permitted to flow in one direction around a central island and priority is typically given to traffic already in the junction 1 2 Movement within a roundabout in right hand traffic note the anticlockwise circulation Movement within a roundabout in left hand traffic note the clockwise circulation The Hotel Indonesia Roundabout in Jakarta Indonesia Engineers use the term modern roundabout to refer to junctions installed after 1960 that incorporate various design rules to increase safety 3 2 Both modern and non modern roundabouts however may bear street names or be identified colloquially by local names such as rotary or traffic circle Compared to stop signs traffic signals and earlier forms of roundabouts modern roundabouts reduce the likelihood and severity of collisions greatly by reducing traffic speeds and minimizing T bone and head on collisions 4 Variations on the basic concept include integration with tram or train lines two way flow higher speeds and many others For pedestrians traffic exiting the roundabout comes from one direction instead of three simplifying the pedestrian s visual environment Traffic moves slowly enough to allow visual engagement with pedestrians encouraging deference towards them Other benefits include reduced driver confusion associated with perpendicular junctions and reduced queuing associated with traffic lights They allow U turns within the normal flow of traffic which often are not possible at other forms of junction Moreover since vehicles that run on gasoline averagely spend less time idling at roundabouts than at signalled intersections using a roundabout potentially leads to less pollution 5 6 When entering vehicles only need to give way they do not always perform a full stop as a result by keeping a part of their momentum the engine will produce less work to regain the initial speed resulting in lower emissions Research has also shown that slow moving traffic in roundabouts makes less noise than traffic that must stop and start speed up and brake 7 Modern roundabouts were first standardised in the UK in 1966 and were found to be a significant improvement over previous traffic circles and rotaries Since then modern roundabouts have become commonplace throughout the world 2 2 including Australia the United Kingdom and France 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and demise of traffic circles 1 2 1960s development of modern roundabouts 1 3 Spread in Europe and North America since 1970s 1 4 North American introduction since 1990s 2 Modern roundabout 2 1 Terminology 2 1 1 Rotary 2 1 2 Other Terms 3 Operation and design 3 1 Islands 3 1 1 Central 3 1 1 1 Art installations 3 1 2 Pedestrian 3 2 Pedestrian crossing 3 3 Bicycles 3 4 Capacity and delays 3 4 1 Capacity modelling 4 Safety 4 1 Vision impaired pedestrians 5 Types of circular intersections 5 1 Gyratory system 5 2 Smaller small and mini roundabouts 5 3 Mini roundabouts 5 4 Raindrop roundabouts 5 5 Balcony roundabout 5 6 Turbo roundabouts 5 7 Sub sea roundabouts 5 8 Motorways 5 9 Signalised roundabouts 5 10 Magic roundabouts ring junctions 5 11 Dutch style roundabouts for bicycles and pedestrians 5 12 Trams 5 13 Railways 5 14 Through roundabout 5 14 1 Only bicycle pedestrian roundabouts 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksHistory EditOrigins and demise of traffic circles Edit Circular junctions existed before roundabouts including 1768 England the Circus in the city of Bath Somerset was completed This was constructed based on architectural considerations and not for traffic purposes 1780 ca France the Place de l Etoile around the Arc de Triomphe in Paris 1791 US Pierre Charles L Enfant who came to America in 1776 designed a plan of Washington D C which was then being planned This design contained several large places street crossings Many of them had a rectangular outer outline but within each was a place around which the streets should be built thus reducing the number of arms legs of each crossing 1821 US the Governor s Circle later renamed Monument Circle of Indianapolis Indiana which gave the city the nickname The Circle City 1877 France The French architect Eugene Henard was designing one way circular intersections 8 1879 Netherlands the Keizer Karelplein in Nijmegen 9 1899 Germany Brautwiesenplatz Bride Meadow s Place in Gorlitz 10 1904 US Columbus Circle in Manhattan New York 1905 US American architect William Phelps Eno favored small traffic circles He re designed New York City s famous Columbus Circle which was finished in 1905 1907 US architect John McLaren designed one of the first American traffic circles for both autos and streetcars trams in the Hanchett Residence Park in what is now San Jose California 11 1909 United Kingdom The first British circular junction was built in Letchworth Garden City 12 13 Although some may still be somewhat confusingly referred to as roundabouts the operating and entry characteristics of these traffic circles differed considerably from modern roundabouts 14 Circular intersections were built in the United States though many were large diameter rotaries that enabled high speed merge and weave manoeuvres Older style traffic circles may control entering traffic by stop signs or traffic lights Many allow entry at higher speeds without deflection or require a stop and a 90 degree turn to enter Because these circumstances caused a lot of vehicle collisions construction of traffic circles and rotaries ceased in the 1950s and some were removed 15 3 02 National Register of Historic Places plaque on the first traffic circle in the United States at the intersection of River and Pleasant streets in Yarmouth Massachusetts Thomas Circle in Washington D C 1922 Traffic ten abreast traverses the Place de l Etoile This traffic circle surrounds the Arc de Triomphe at the intersection of ten two way and two one way streets It has no lane markings 1960s development of modern roundabouts Edit The United Kingdom s first roundabout 1909 in Letchworth Garden City Widespread use of the modern roundabout began when the UK s Transport Research Laboratory engineers re engineered and standardised circular intersections during the 1960s Frank Blackmore led the development of the priority rule and subsequently invented the mini roundabout 16 17 to overcome capacity and safety limitations The priority rule was found to improve traffic flow by up to 10 18 In 1966 the United Kingdom adopted a rule at all circular junctions that required entering traffic to give way to circulating traffic A Transportation Research Board guide reports that the modern roundabout represents a significant improvement in terms of both operations and safety when compared with older rotaries and traffic circles 14 The design became mandatory in the United Kingdom for all new roundabouts in November 1966 citation needed Australia and other British influenced countries were the first outside the UK to build modern roundabouts 3 Spread in Europe and North America since 1970s Edit In the 1970s France and Norway adopted the modern roundabout 19 In 1980 Switzerland had 19 roundabouts 3 In 1980 Norway had 15 roundabouts 3 In the early 1980s single lane roundabouts or mini roundabouts were also introduced in the Netherlands 19 It began in the relatively sparsely populated northern and eastern Netherlands because of fears that the roundabouts would not be able to cope with the traffic density of the Randstad however when it appeared the single lane roundabouts had an even higher capacity than signalised intersections they were constructed en masse in the western Netherlands as well 19 In 1983 France adopted the yield at entry rule on national routes since then the country s roundabouts have proliferated 3 In 1985 Norway put up yield signs at the entries to all its roundabouts After this safety and traffic flow rapidly improved 3 and Norwegian roundabouts increased from 15 in 1980 to 350 in 1990 to 500 in 1992 3 In 1987 Switzerland introduced the yield at entry rule since then its roundabouts increased from 19 in 1980 to 220 in early 1992 while 500 more were being considered 3 In the late 1980s the Netherlands saw significant growth with about 400 roundabouts constructed in just 6 years 3 Construction accelerated in the 1990s and by 2001 there were an estimated 1 500 to 1 800 roundabouts in the Netherlands more than half of which were located within built up areas 19 In 1990 US constructed its first roundabout In 1991 France was building 1 000 roundabouts every year 3 As modern roundabouts rose in popularity in the 1980s the old traffic circles fell out of favour and many were converted into modern roundabouts or other types of intersections 3 In 1999 Canada built its first modern roundabout 20 As of the beginning of the 21st century roundabouts were in widespread use in Europe For instance In 2010 France had more than 30 000 roundabouts 21 There were around 25 000 in the United Kingdom in 2015 22 Roundabout Haarlem Netherlands 1990 Cyclists may also be users of a roundabout Small roundabout in Barzio Italy Roundabout in Strasswalchen Austria Roundabout in the centre of Colombo Sri Lanka Double lane Raindrop Fountain Roundabout in Zenica Bosnia and Herzegovina where roundabouts replaced all traffic lights since 2011 Roundabout signs in Linkoping Sweden A roundabout sign example used in the UKNorth American introduction since 1990s Edit Modern roundabout in Hughesville Maryland in 2020 Modern roundabout intersection in Murrayville Langley British Columbia Roundabout sign in Ontario Canada In the United States modern roundabouts emerged in the 1990s after years of planning and educational campaigning by Frank Blackmore and Leif Ourston who sought to bring the by then well established increased safety and traffic flow in other countries to America 15 5 03 The very first was constructed in Summerlin Nevada in the summer of 1990 3 23 This roundabout occasioned dismay from residents and a local news program said about it Even police agree roundabouts can be confusing at times 24 Between 1990 and 1995 numerous modern roundabounts were built in California Colorado Florida Maryland Nevada and Vermont 3 A roundabout sign in Astoria Oregon Municipalities introducing new roundabouts often were met with some degree of public resistance just as in the United Kingdom in the 1960s American confusion at how to enter and especially how to exit a roundabout was the subject of mockery such as featured in the film European Vacation 1985 21 25 15 6 45 A 1998 survey of municipalities found public opinion 68 opposed prior to construction changing thereafter to 73 in favour 26 A 2007 survey found public support ranging from 22 to 44 prior to construction and several years after construction was 57 to 87 27 By 2011 however some 3 000 roundabouts had been established with that number growing steadily 21 25 15 6 45 In the mid 2010s about 3 of the then circa 4 000 U S modern roundabouts were located in Carmel Indiana whose mayor James Brainard had been actively promoting their construction because of increased safety injuries caused by car accidents in the city dropped by 80 after 1996 15 0 02 As of December 2015 update there were about 4 800 modern roundabouts in the United States citation needed As an example Washington state contained about 120 roundabouts as of October 2016 update all having been built since 1997 with more planned 28 The first Canadian modern roundabout was built in 1999 They became increasingly popular amongst traffic planners and civil engineers in the 15 years thereafter due to their success in Europe By 2014 there were about 400 roundabouts in Canada at the time most in Quebec Alberta British Columbia and Ontario or one per 90 000 inhabitants compared to one per 84 000 inhabitants in the United States that year 20 Modern roundabout EditRoundabout sign examples Vienna Convention mandatory Vienna Convention warning MUTCD warning Give Way Yield Right hand traffic shown Direction arrows are mirrored for left hand traffic A modern roundabout is a type of looping junction in which road traffic travels in one direction around a central island and priority is given to the circulating flow Signs usually direct traffic entering the circle to slow and to give way to traffic already on it 29 30 Because low speeds are required for traffic entering roundabouts they are physically designed to slow traffic entering the junction to improve safety so that the roads typically approach the junction radially whereas older style traffic circles may be designed to try to increase speeds and have roads that enter the circle tangentially Roundabouts are normally not used on controlled access highways because of the low speed requirement but may be used on lower grades of highway such as limited access roads When such roads are redesigned to incorporate roundabouts traffic speeds must be reduced via tricks such as curving the approaches Many traffic circles have been converted to modern roundabouts including the former Kingston traffic circle in New York and several in New Jersey 31 32 Others have been converted to signalised intersections such as the Drum Hill Rotary in Chelmsford Massachusetts which is now six lanes wide and controlled by four separate intersections 33 Terminology Edit The word roundabout dates from early 20th century use in the United Kingdom 1 In U S dictionaries the terms roundabout traffic circle road circle and rotary are synonyms 34 However several experts such as Leif Ourston have stressed the need to distinguish between the characteristics of the modern roundabout and the nonconforming traffic circle 3 Modern roundaboutEntering traffic yields to circulating traffic Entering traffic aims at the centre of the central island and is deflected slowly around it Upstream roadway often flares at entry adding lanesNonconforming traffic circleEntering traffic cuts off circulating traffic Entering traffic aims to one side of the central island right side for right hand traffic and proceeds straight ahead at speed Lanes are not added at entry The U S Department of Transportation adopted the term modern roundabout to distinguish those that require entering drivers to give way to others Many old traffic circles remain in the northeastern US 2 Some modern roundabouts are elongated to encompass additional streets but traffic always flows in a loop Rotary Edit In the United States traffic engineers typically use the term rotary for large scale circular junctions between expressways or controlled access highways Rotaries of this type typically feature high speeds inside the circle and on the approaches 35 In the United States New England region however rotary is the general term for all roundabouts including those with modern designs State laws in these states mandate that traffic already driving in the rotary always has the right of way For instance in Massachusetts Any operator of a vehicle entering a rotary intersection shall yield the right of way to any vehicle already in the intersection 36 In Rhode Island entering vehicles Yield to vehicles in the roundabout 37 Other Terms Edit In the dialect used in the Scottish city of Dundee circle is used to refer to roundabouts 38 In the Channel Islands a third type of roundabout known as Filter in Turn exists Here approaching drivers neither give way to traffic on the roundabout as normal nor have priority over it but take it in turns to enter from each Almost all of Jersey s roundabouts are of this type 39 In the Philippines the term rotunda or rotonda is used in referring to roundabouts Operation and design EditThis section includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this section by introducing more precise citations December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message One famous roundabout is the Place Charles de Gaulle Etoile where 12 avenues come together drawing a star which explains the word etoile star in French In the middle of the roundabout is the Arc de Triomphe A roundabout next to the Elovainio shopping centre in Ylojarvi Finland The fundamental principle of modern roundabouts is that entering drivers give way to traffic within the roundabout without the need for traffic signals Conversely older traffic circles typically require circling drivers to give way to entering traffic Roundabouts may also have an interior lane 40 Generally exiting directly from an inner lane of a multi lane roundabout is permitted given that the intersecting road has as many lanes as the roundabout By contrast exiting from an inner lane of an older traffic circle is usually not permitted and traffic must first move into the outside lane Vehicles circulate around the central island in one direction at speeds of 25 40 km h 15 25 mph In left hand traffic countries they circulate clockwise looking from above in right hand traffic anticlockwise Multi lane roundabouts are typically less than 75 metres 250 ft in diameter 41 older traffic circles and roundabout interchanges may be considerably larger Roundabouts are roughly the same size as signalled intersections of the same capacity Design criteria include Right of way Whether entering or circling vehicles have the right of way The New Jersey Driver s Manual recommends that in the absence of flow control signs traffic yields based on the circle s historically established traffic flow pattern 42 and there are no set rules In New England 43 Washington D C and New York State 44 entering traffic yields as is the norm in virtually all countries outside of the U S Angle of entry Angles range from glancing tangential that allow full speed entry to 90 degree angles perpendicular 45 Deflection is required to avoid vehicles entering at excessive speeds 46 Traffic speed High entry speeds over 30 mph or 48 km h require circulating vehicles to yield often stopping which lowers capacity and increases crash rates compared to modern roundabouts 47 Lane changes Allowed or not Diameter The greater the traffic the larger the circle 45 Island function Parking parks fountains etc 45 Islands Edit Roundabout at Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands with modern art animals on the central island and an apron that can be used by large trucks Modern roundabouts feature a central island and sometimes pedestrian islands at each entry or exit often for decoration Denmark has begun widespread adoption of particular high islands or if not possible obstacles such as hedges or a ring of trees in larger examples This is done to further increase the safety benefits of roundabouts as the obstacles have been found to discomfort drivers more so than the roundabout itself compared to conventional intersections thus initiating further observation and care taking of the driver In Denmark it was found to decrease accidents in roundabouts by 27 to 84 depending on height and type In studies heights of 0 0 9 1 1 9 and 2 metres were evaluated It was found that for all heights especially accidents leading to human injuries were reduced the most by 47 to 84 for the aforementioned heights 48 The level of irritation to drivers is not to be understated as it is the crucial point of the design to force drivers to pay attention to the sides of the driving direction This leads to drivers complaining about these designs as Denmark in most regards embraces designing road infrastructure such that the wanted driving behaviour leads to comfort i e lane width corresponding to speed limit and obstacles encouraging slowdown near points of safety concern such as schools Such is the controversy for drivers that seasoned drivers teachers complain about this discomfort a decade after its safety is proven and adoption widespread 49 Central Edit A fountain dominates this roundabout in Aix en Provence France The central island may be surrounded by a truck apron that is high enough to discourage drivers from crossing over it but low enough to allow wide or long vehicles to navigate the roundabout The island may provide a visual barrier to alert approaching drivers to the presence of the roundabout and to encourage drivers to focus on the traffic in the path of the circle A visual barrier significantly reduces the accident rate 50 Otherwise vehicles anywhere in or near the circle can cause those entering to stop and wait for them to pass even if they are opposite which unnecessarily reduces traffic flow The barrier may be a landscaped mound a raised wall a tree or tall shrubs Road signage or flagpoles may be erected at the top of a landscaped mound Some communities use the island for monuments the display of large public art or for a fountain Pedestrians may be prohibited from crossing the circling lane s Access to the central island requires an underpass or overpass for safety Art installations Edit Roundabouts have attracted art installations around the world Bend Oregon United States Bend s Roundabout sculptures were honoured by Americans for the Arts as among the 37 most innovative approaches to Public Art in the country 51 52 Fuerteventura Canary Islands Spain Local government displayed sculptures at several roundabouts 53 Many countries in Europe France first 54 but also Germany 55 Austria 55 Italy 56 Spain 57 and others 55 show the widespread use of roundabouts as art installations 58 59 An inventory of roundabouts in France made by Marc Lescuyer listed 3 328 roundabouts with artistic decor early in 2010 58 60 The Minerva Roundabout in Guadalajara Mexico is one of the city s most famous monuments It features the goddess Minerva standing on a pedestal surrounded by a large fountain with an inscription saying Justice wisdom and strength guard this loyal city Several famous monuments in Europe such as the Gate of Alcala in Madrid Spain or the Arc du Triomphe in Paris France have been isolated from street traffic by means of a roundabout The Garces Memorial Circle in Bakersfield California contains a statue to Father Francisco Garces Pedestrian Edit This roundabout in Shanghai China has a pedestrian bridge in the form of another raised roundabout For larger roundabouts pedestrian islands at each entry exit encourage drivers to slow and prepare to enter the circle They also provide a refuge where pedestrians may pause mid crossing Vehicles or bicycles entering or exiting the roundabout must yield to all traffic including pedestrians 61 Pedestrian crossing Edit Pedestrian crossings at each entry exit may be located at least one full car length outside the circle The extra space allows pedestrians to cross behind vehicles waiting to enter the circle and to allow exiting vehicles to stop for pedestrians without obstruction Each pedestrian crossing may traverse a pedestrian island for protection that also forces drivers to slow and begin to change direction encouraging slower safer speeds On the island the pedestrian crossing may become diagonal to direct the gaze of those crossing into exiting traffic Bicycles Edit Physically separated bikeways best protect cyclists 62 63 64 Less optimally terminating cycle lanes well before roundabout entrances requires cyclists to merge into the stream of motor traffic but keeps cyclists in full view of drivers at some cost in motor vehicle speed Cyclists may also be permitted to use pedestrian crossings Traditional cycle lanes increase vehicle bicycle collisions When exiting a motorist must look ahead to avoid colliding with another vehicle or with pedestrians on a pedestrian crossing As the intersection curves away from the exit the path of an exiting vehicle is relatively straight and so the motorist may often not slow substantially To give way to a cyclist on the outside requires the exiting motorist to look toward the rear to the perimeter Other vehicles can obstruct the driver s view in this direction complicating the motorist s task The more frequent requirements for motorists to slow or stop reduce traffic flow A 1992 study 65 found that the risk to cyclists is high in all such intersections but much higher when the junction has a marked bicycle lane or sidepath around its perimeter 66 67 Cycle lanes were installed at Museum Road Portsmouth but were replaced by a narrowed carriageway to encourage lane sharing The roundabout at the Brown Road and Loop 202 interchange in Mesa Arizona adopts a U S recommended design 68 On street pavement markings direct cyclists to enter the sidewalk at the end of the bike lane Cyclists who choose to travel on the wide sidewalk cross roundabout arms perpendicularly well outside the circle A pedestrian island allows pedestrians and cyclists to cross one lane at a time The Hovenring bicycle roundabout in the Netherlands is an innovative design completely separating bicycles from vehicular traffic Pavement markings invite cyclists to enter sidewalk on approach to roundabout in Mesa Arizona Cyclists are still permitted to use the roundabout like any other vehicle Cyclists can choose to ride on the sidewalk on far right or in the main lanes of this roundabout in Mesa Arizona Capacity and delays Edit Traffic approaching Chiverton Cross roundabout in Cornwall UK The capacity of a roundabout varies based on entry angle lane width and the number of entry and circulating lanes As with other types of junctions operational performance depends heavily on the flow volumes from various approaches A single lane roundabout can handle approximately 20 000 26 000 vehicles per day while a two lane design supports 40 000 to 50 000 63 Under many traffic conditions a roundabout operates with less delay than signalised or all way stop approaches Roundabouts do not stop all entering vehicles reducing both individual and queuing delays Throughput further improves because drivers proceed when traffic is clear without waiting for a signal to change Roundabouts can increase delays in locations where traffic would otherwise often not be required to stop For example at the junction of a high volume and a low volume road traffic on the busier road would stop only when cross traffic was present otherwise not having to slow for the roundabout When the volumes on the roadways are relatively equal a roundabout can reduce delays because half of the time a full stop would be required Dedicated left turn signals in countries where traffic drives on the right further reduce throughput Roundabouts can reduce delays for pedestrians compared to traffic signals because pedestrians are able to cross during any safe gap rather than waiting for a signal During peak flows when large gaps are infrequent the slower speed of traffic entering and exiting can still allow crossing despite the smaller gaps Studies of roundabouts that replaced stop signs and or traffic signals found that vehicle delays were reduced 13 89 percent and the proportion of vehicles that stopped was reduced 14 56 percent Delays on major approaches increased as vehicles slowed to enter the roundabouts 6 Roundabouts have been found to reduce carbon monoxide emissions by 15 45 percent nitrous oxide emissions by 21 44 percent carbon dioxide emissions by 23 37 percent and hydrocarbon emissions by 0 42 percent Fuel consumption was reduced by an estimated 23 34 percent 6 Capacity modelling Edit Many countries have researched roundabout capacity The software can help calculate capacity delay and queues Packages include ARCADY Rodel Highway Capacity Software and Sidra Intersection ARCADY and Rodel are based on the Transport Research Laboratory mathematical model The TRL approach is derived from empirical models based on geometric parameters and observed driver behaviour with regard to lane choice Sidra Intersection software includes roundabout capacity models developed in Australia and the US Research on Australian roundabouts was conducted in the 1980s at the Australian Road Research Board ARRB 69 Its analytical capacity and performance models differ from the TRL model significantly following a lane based gap acceptance theory including geometric parameters Research on U S roundabouts sponsored by the Transportation Research Board TRB and Federal Highway Administration FHWA culminated in a capacity model that was included in the Highway Capacity Manual HCM Edition 6 70 and the TRB FHWA Roundabout Informational Guide NCHRP Report 672 71 The HCM Edition 6 model is based on lane based gap acceptance theory A recent NCHRP survey of US state transport agencies found that Sidra Intersection is the most widely used software tool in the US for roundabout analysis 72 Safety Edit A comparison of possible collision points on a roundabout versus a traditional intersection Small modern roundabout in the United States where vehicles are driven on the right Roundabout in the United States with separated side lanes Vehicles entering the roundabout give way to vehicles in the roundabout A typical trunk road roundabout in the UK at Carland Cross on the A30 in Cornwall United Kingdom There is a free flow lane for the A30 towards Bodmin nearest the camera Statistically modern roundabouts are safer for drivers and pedestrians than both older style traffic circles and traditional intersections 73 Compared with these other forms of intersections modern roundabouts experience 39 fewer vehicle collisions 76 fewer injuries and 90 fewer serious injuries and fatalities according to a study of a sampling of roundabouts in the United States when compared with the junctions they replaced 74 At junctions with stop signs or traffic lights the most serious accidents are right angle left turn or head on collisions where vehicles move fast and collide at high impact angles e g head on Roundabouts virtually eliminate those types of crashes Instead most crashes are glancing blows at low angles of impact 75 76 Further a study based on satellite imagery of all intersections in Australia observed consistently low speeds on roundabouts compared to other intersection types contributing to reduced injury severity in case of a crash 77 Some larger roundabouts take foot and bicycle traffic through underpasses or alternate routes However an analysis 78 of the New Zealand national crash database 79 for the period 1996 2000 shows that 26 of cyclists reported injury crashes happened at roundabouts compared to 6 at traffic signals and 13 at priority controlled junctions The New Zealand researchers propose that low vehicle speeds circulatory lane markings and mountable centre aprons for trucks can reduce the problem 80 The most common roundabout crash type for cyclists according to the New Zealand study involves a motor vehicle entering the roundabout and colliding with a cyclist who already is travelling around the roundabout more than half of cyclist roundabout crashes in New Zealand fall into this category The next most common crash type involves motorists leaving the roundabout colliding with cyclists who are continuing farther around the perimeter Vision impaired pedestrians Edit Poorly designed walkways increase risks for the vision impaired because it is more difficult than at a signalised intersection to audibly detect whether there is a sufficient gap in traffic to cross safely At a signalised intersection traffic comes to a stop and an audible sound can be generated to indicate that it is time to cross 81 This issue has led to a conflict in the United States between the vision impaired and civil engineering communities One solution is to provide manually operated pedestrian crossing signals at each entry This increases construction and operation costs and requires some way to disrupt traffic long enough for the pedestrian to cross such as a HAWK beacon that defeats the purpose of the roundabout Signalisation also increases delays for most pedestrians during periods of light traffic since pedestrians need to wait for a signal to change before legally crossing 82 Signalised pedestrian crossings are normally used on large diameter roundabout interchanges rather than small diameter modern roundabouts Types of circular intersections EditThis article needs editing for compliance with Wikipedia s Manual of Style Please help improve it if you can October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Large roundabouts such as those used at motorway junctions typically have two to six lanes and may include traffic lights to regulate flow Some roundabouts have a divider or subsidiary deflection island by means of which is provided a free flow segregated left or right turn lane for the UK see Design Manual for Roads and Bridges TD 51 03 between traffic moving between two adjacent roads and traffic within the roundabout enabling drivers to bypass the roundabout Gyratory system Edit The term gyratory for example Hanger Lane gyratory is sometimes used in the United Kingdom for a large circular intersection with non standard lane markings or priority arrangements or where there are significant lengths of carriageway between the entry arms or when buildings occupy the central island 83 In the 21st century several gyratory systems in London have been removed including Tottenham Hale 84 and Elephant and Castle Smaller small and mini roundabouts Edit A small roundabout in Waterloo Ontario Canada As the overall or external size of a roundabout in the UK referred to as the Inscribed Circle Diameter ICD is reduced so the maximum practicable and prescribed diameter for the central island is also reduced whilst the width of the circulatory carriageway increases due to the greater width of vehicle swept path at smaller turning radii In most cases this results in it being too easy certainly when traffic is light relative to capacity for drivers to traverse the roundabout at relatively high speed with scant regard for road markings or the potential dangers to self or conflicts with other road users To mitigate this risk a proportion of the circulatory carriageway an annulus around the central island is segregated from general use by demarcation lines and differentiated from the outer annulus of the carriageway by a combination of a slightly raised surface adverse crossfall contrasting colours and textures and demarcating lines The effect of this is to discourage drivers from taking a more direct path through the roundabout their line of least resistance is more tightly curved and therefore slower but more bearable The inner annulus provides for the trailing axles of longer or articulated vehicles to sweep across the inner annulus which is therefore known as an over run area in UK usage truck apron or mountable apron The smaller the roundabout the more such mitigation measures are likely to be abused the less effective they will be In the UK the minimum size for roundabouts with raised islands is 28 metre diameter ICD with a 4 metre diameter island This threshold being driven primarily by vehicle geometry which is globally relatively consistent rather than driver behaviour it is adopted in other jurisdictions too Below this minimum size the mini roundabout prevails Mini roundabouts Edit After developing the offside priority rule Frank Blackmore of the UK s Transport Research Laboratory turned his attention to the possibility of a roundabout that could be built at sites lacking room for a conventional roundabout 85 Small roundabout in Kargilik Xinjiang China Mini roundabout in Uftrungen Germany A mini roundabout in the UK where a painted white circle is used as centre The arrows show the direction of traffic Roundabout in rural Qatar Mini roundabouts can incorporate a painted circle or a low dome but must be fully traversable by vehicles Motorists can drive over them when there is no other traffic but it is dangerous to do so otherwise Once the practice is established it may be difficult to discourage Mini roundabouts use the same right of way rules as standard roundabouts but produce different driver behaviour Mini roundabouts are sometimes grouped in pairs a double mini roundabout or in chains simplifying navigation of otherwise awkward junctions In some countries road signs distinguish mini roundabouts from larger ones Mini roundabouts are common in the UK Ireland and Hong Kong particularly on Hong Kong Island as well as Irapuato in Mexico In the UK and also in other jurisdictions that have adopted mini roundabouts to drive across the central disc or dome when it is practicable to avoid it is an offence Vehicles are required to treat the painted circle as if it were a solid island and drive around it 86 Some local authorities paint double white lines around the circle to indicate this but these require permission from the Secretary of State for Transport The central dome also must be able to be overrun by larger vehicles In the UK and also in other highway jurisdictions the maximum size for a mini roundabout is 28 metre 30 yard ICD inscribed circle diameter Raindrop roundabouts Edit These roundabouts do not form a complete circle and have a raindrop or teardrop shape They have also been used at bowtie intersections replacing traffic signals that are inefficient without a turning lane In addition to their use at intersections raindrop roundabouts are also used in dogbone interchanges described below Balcony roundabout Edit A balcony roundabout is just an elevated roundabout They are constructed in such a way that vulnerable road users can cross underneath the roundabout Footpaths and cycle paths along the different roads connect to the square under the roundabout Vulnerable road users do not interfere with motorised traffic on the roundabout reducing the risk of collision Turbo roundabouts Edit A much applied turbo roundabout design in the Netherlands In the Netherlands Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina the United Kingdom Finland Spain Poland Hungary Slovenia the Czech Republic North Macedonia and Croatia a relatively new type of two lane roundabout designs is emerging called turbo roundabouts These designs require motorists to choose their direction before entering the roundabout thereby eliminating many conflicting paths and choices on the roundabout itself so that traffic safety is increased as well as speed and capacity These designs seen from above typically result in a spiralling flow of traffic giving them the collective name of turbo roundabouts As a minor drawback turbo roundabouts are often marked out such that a U turn by means of the roundabout is not possible for drivers approaching on certain arms Several variations of turbo roundabouts exist They are frequently designed for the intersection of a major road crossing a road with less traffic An early application of the principle was a six arm and therefore relatively large and fast non circular roundabout at Stairfoot Barnsley South Yorkshire which was given spiral marking about 1984 At that time the method was considered experimental and needed special consent from central authorities The turbo roundabout was formally developed in 1996 in the Netherlands by Lambertus Fortuijn a researcher from the Delft University of Technology 87 Similar roundabouts with spiralling lane markings have been used for many years in the UK e g the A176 A127 eastbound at Basildon Essex 51 33 41 N 0 27 11 E 51 561399 N 0 452934 E 51 561399 0 452934 However it was not until 1997 that the UK s national highway authorities published guidance DMRB TA 78 97 that in effect endorsed the use of spiral markings in certain circumstances Turbo roundabouts can be built with raised lane separators common in the Netherlands 88 or with lane markings only The use of raised lane separators prevents road users from weaving thereby reducing conflicts but can make manoeuvring more difficult for large vehicles A comparison between a two lane roundabout and a turboroundabout showing possible collision points According to simulations a two lane roundabout with three exits should offer 12 20 greater traffic flow than a conventional three lane roundabout of the same size The reason is reduced weaving that makes entering and exiting more predictable Because there are only ten points of conflict compared with 8 for a conventional single lane roundabout or between 32 and 64 with traffic signal control this design is often safer as well Research and experiments show that traffic accidents are reduced by 72 on turbo roundabouts compared to multi lane roundabouts which have 12 points of conflict 89 Research at Windesheim University also shows that turbo roundabouts reduce accidents including casualties by some 75 when compared to regular intersections and by 61 compared to single lane roundabouts 90 The same research made it very clear that it is safer for cyclists not to have priority over motor vehicles on the roundabout than to have it 90 At least 70 have been built in the Netherlands while many turbos or similar lane splitting designs can be found in southeast Asia 91 Multi lane roundabouts in the United States of America are typically required to be striped with spiral markings 92 as most states follow the federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices Sub sea roundabouts Edit A new development is the roundabout below the seabed in locations where multiple undersea traffic tunnels join The first such roundabout is in the Eysturoy Tunnel Eysturoyartunnilin opened in December 2020 in the Faroe Islands It connects the main island Streymoy with two locations on the island Eysturoy that are separated by a long fjord Skalafjordur So three roads meet at this roundabout Total length of the system is 11 24 km 6 98 mi It was the largest ever infrastructure project in the Faroe Islands estimated to have cost around a billion DKK 93 Motorways Edit See also Roundabout interchange Motorway junction with roundabout near Opatovice nad Labem Czech Republic Roundabouts are generally not appropriate for placement on motorway or freeway mainlines because the purpose of such facilities is to provide for uninterrupted traffic flow However roundabouts are often used for the junction between the slip roads called ramps in North America and the intersecting road A single roundabout grade separated from the mainlines may be used to create a roundabout interchange This type of junction is common in the UK and Ireland Alternatively separate roundabouts also may be used at the slip road intersections of a diamond interchange to create what often is referred to as a dumbbell interchange which is increasingly common in both Europe and North America due to its reduced need for wide or multiple bridges A variation of the dumbbell interchange often called a dogbone interchange occurs when the roundabouts do not form a complete circle but are instead raindrop roundabouts described above This configuration reduces conflicts between vehicles entering the raindrop roundabouts from the ramps reducing queueing and delays compared with the dumbbell interchange Additional use of roundabouts for high speed junctions is the 3 level stacked roundabout this is a roundabout interchange where both of the roadway mainlines are grade separated In the United Kingdom the M25 A3 M8 M73 and A1 M M18 interchanges are examples of this type These junctions however have less capacity than a full free flow interchange A similar design to this is the three level diamond interchange Most junctions on Dublin s M50 motorway C road were built using a standard roundabout interchange The traffic volume of several of these junctions increased to a level higher than the capacity such roundabouts can accommodate and in turn have been converted into partially or fully free flowing interchanges One example is the Red Cow interchange In Northern Ireland the junction between the M1 and M12 Craigavon connector motorway is via a standard roundabout with a raised centre three onslips and three offslips and two lanes In the city of Malmo Sweden a roundabout connects two motorways E22 from Lund and the Inner ring road In the Netherlands A6 motorway and A7 motorway used to cross near Joure using a roundabout until October 2017 when the junction was turned into a full Y interchange 94 The junction between the A200 and the A9 uses a 3 level stacked roundabout Near Eindhoven the Leenderheide junction the junction for the A2 uses a roundabout An overpass was built for the A67 from Antwerp to Germany Near Liege Belgium the Cheratte interchange between the A3 E40 and A25 E25 functions partially as a roundabout with through traffic allowed to continue without entering the junction and traffic changing between motorways required to use the roundabout Rotary interchanges operate with traffic circles rather than roundabouts Rotary interchanges are common in New England particularly in the state of Massachusetts but a European example of a rotary interchange may be found in Hinwil Switzerland Signalised roundabouts Edit A major signal controlled roundabout interchange in central Bristol England Vehicles drive on the left and vehicles in the roundabout are stopped by traffic lights to allow other vehicles to enter while an underpass permits straight through traffic to bypass the roundabout entirely A signalised roundabout is one where one or more entry is controlled by traffic signals rather than by assumed priority For each signalised entry there will also be a signalised stopline immediately upstream on the circulatory section The signals prevent blocking on the roundabout and balance and improve traffic capacity 95 Examples include the M50 in Dublin the Cherry Street roundabout in Kowloon Hong Kong Sheriffhall Roundabout in Edinburgh Scotland Newton Circus in Singapore and many of the roundabouts along the Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City An evolution of the signalised roundabout has been proposed recently 96 It is based in avoiding stops by eliminating conflict points in roundabouts This proposed new paradigm SYROPS forms platoons of vehicles e g 2 x 3 cars that arrive at the roundabout with speed identical to the average circulation speed in the roundabout and within the time interval visualised as a rotating priority sector assigned to his entrance avoiding all the conflicts of passage and with it the stops and accelerations required in standard and in signalled roundabouts Signalling signage is with lights for human drivers and optionally wireless for connected and autonomous vehicles undue weight discuss Magic roundabouts ring junctions Edit Magic roundabouts direct traffic in both directions around the central island They are officially known as ring junctions The first magic roundabout was constructed in 1972 in Swindon Wiltshire United Kingdom designed by Frank Blackmore 97 inventor of the mini roundabout The roundabout joins five roads and consists of a two way road around the central island with five mini roundabouts meeting the incoming roads 98 The name derives from the popular children s television series The Magic Roundabout and is considered magic because traffic flows in both clockwise and anticlockwise directions This is achieved by surrounding the main island with one smaller roundabout per entry exit street This pattern directs traffic in the usual clockwise in LHT installations or counter clockwise in RHT installations manner around each mini roundabout Exiting the mini roundabouts traffic may proceed around the central island either in the usual direction via the outer loop or in the inverse direction the inner loop The arrangement offers multiple paths between feeder roads Drivers typically choose the shorter most fluid route Although the safety record is good 99 many drivers find this system intimidating and some drivers go to great lengths to avoid them 100 101 102 Similar systems are found in the Moor End roundabout in Hemel Hempstead Hertfordshire which has six intersections in High Wycombe Buckinghamshire 103 the Denham Roundabout in Denham Buckinghamshire the Greenstead Roundabout in Colchester Essex The Egg in Tamworth Staffordshire and the Hatton Cross Roundabout in London 104 Churchbridge Junction in Staffordshire is a magic gyratory This type of junction is similar to a magic roundabout except that the constituent roundabouts are connected by longer lengths of roadway 105 Line drawing of the Magic Roundabout at Hemel Hempstead illustrating the concept and the reverse anticlockwise flow of the inner lane The Swindon Magic RoundaboutDutch style roundabouts for bicycles and pedestrians Edit Dutch style roundabout Dutch roundabouts are designed to give cyclists priority over motorists Cyclists have an outer ring on the roundabout with cycle crossings over each of the four approach roads in a contrasting red surface There are also zebra crossings over each approach road for pedestrians 106 Reduced lane widths on the roundabout and at exit and entry points are designed to encourage drivers to slow down 107 Near Nationaltheatret in Oslo tramways cross the roundabout Haymarket roundabout Melbourne Trams Edit This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page July 2015 Tram roundabouts which are found in many countries merge roundabouts for individual vehicles with tram lines Large areas are needed for tram roundabouts that include a junction between tram lines Such systems often contain tram stops Tramways usually cross at the centre of the roundabout This requires traffic lights or special signalling granting the trams priority However there are also roundabouts where trams and vehicles use the same lane Some roundabouts have a tram stop on the island In France tram roundabouts commonly have radii between 14 and 22 metres although some have radii outside this range 108 In some cities the tramway bisects the roundabout The French Cerema fr considers that the mix of priorities makes these confusing and difficult to understand a traditional modern roundabout gives the priority to the central ring while tram roundabouts give priority to the central ring but higher priority still to the tramway This generates many collisions of cars and trams between 7 and 10 for each tram roundabout in France between 2006 and 2015 between 0 37 and 1 01 per year 108 contradictory In inner Melbourne particularly in the inner suburban area of South Melbourne where the tram network is extensive tram tracks always pass through the central island with drivers required to give way to vehicles approaching from their right and to trams approaching from right angles The Haymarket roundabout between Royal Parade and Elizabeth Street contains a tram stop pedestrian crossings three entering tram lines traffic signals to stop vehicular traffic at each crossing point when a tram is due service roads and a pedestrian crossing Brussels tram roundabouts employ multiple configurations At the Barriere de St Gilles Dutch Bareel St Gillis tram tracks form a circle in the carriageway while Verboekhoven and Altitude Cent Hoogte Honderd have reserved tram tracks inside the roundabout At Place Stephanie Stefaniaplein they go straight through the centre with a slip track up the Chaussee de Charleroi Charleroisesteenweg while at Montgomery they tunnel underneath In Dublin Ireland the Red Cow interchange at the N7 M50 junction is grade separated and is signal controlled with secondary lanes separate from the main roundabout for those making left turns The junction the busiest in Ireland had tram lines added to it with the opening of the Luas system in 2004 The tracks pass across one carriageway of the N7 and across the southern M50 sliproads Trams pass every five minutes at rush hour The roundabout was replaced with a grade separated free flowing junction Gothenburg Sweden has a tram roundabout and tram stop at Korsvagen the Crossroad It carries heavy road traffic and about one tram or bus per minute passes in each direction This is further complicated by separated rights of way for trams and buses and the fact that it is one of the busiest interchanges in the city Another is located at Mariaplan in the inner suburb of Majorna The trams make a right turn giving the roundabout an odd design In Warsaw trams typically cross straight through roundabouts and have junctions in the centre of them In Wroclaw Poland trams pass through the Powstancow Slaskich Roundabout stopping in the roundabout north headed track The Silesian tram network in Poland has two tram roundabouts In the city centre of Katowice the tram line passes through the centre of the Zietka Roundabout in a north south alignment with a tram stop in the centre of the circle a In Bedzin unusually the tram junction itself forms a circular roundabout with trams going around the circle there are tram stops immediately outside the roundabout on each branch In Vitezne namesti Victory Square in Prague Czech Republic a tramway crosses the carriage way of the roundabout at three places Entering as well as leaving trams give way to vehicles In the years 1932 42 trams circulated much like vehicles 109 In Kyiv Ukraine an interchange of two fast tram lines is below a roundabout Oslo Norway also has many roundabouts with tram tracks passing through for example at Bislett Frogner plass Sinsen Solli plass Carl Berners plass and Storo In Wolverhampton England the West Midlands Metro tram passes through the centre of a roundabout on the approach to its terminus at St Georges This also happens in New Addington in Croydon on the Tramlink north of King Henry s Drive tram stop on Old Lodge Lane at the junction to King Henry s Drive In Sheffield England the Sheffield Supertram systems crosses two major roundabouts At the Brook Hill roundabout near Sheffield University the tramway passes underneath the roundabout in a subway while at Park Square in the city centre it travels above the roundabout on bridges and viaducts with a junction in the central island A roundabout in southern Zagreb Croatia features tram tracks passing through curving at a 90 angle as well as a full tram mini roundabout inside the middle road island In Croatia where tram tracks enter the road without traffic lights trams have the highest priority and other non emergency vehicles are required to yield In Salt Lake City Utah a light rail line on the south side of the University of Utah crosses a roundabout where Guardsman Way meets South Campus Drive Like virtually all rail crossings in the United States both crossings in the circle are equipped with boom barriers In Kassel Germany Lines 4 and 8 pass through the centre of the roundabout at Platz der Deutschen Einheit The tram stops are in the centre of the roundabout Roundabout traffic is controlled by traffic lights Pedestrian access is via subway and street level crossings at the lights In Bremen Germany tram lines 8 and 6 pass through the centre of the roundabout Am Stern east of the main railway station They enter from the west and exit in a northeastern direction thus making a slight bend within the roundabout Both stations are situated on the north eastern edge of the roundabout Traffic is controlled by two colour traffic lights inside the roundabout Railways Edit The Main North Line railway bisects the State Highway 1 Main Street roundabout in Blenheim New Zealand In Jensen Beach Florida the main line of the Florida East Coast Railway running north south bisects the two lane roundabout at the junction of Jensen Beach Boulevard running east west It hosts three other roads and the service entrance to a large shopping plaza Boom barriers line the railway crossings The landscaped central island bisected by the tracks was originally curbed kerbed but 18 wheelers had trouble negotiating the roundabout so the curbs were replaced with painted concrete strips The roundabout was built in the early 2000s and improved traffic flow although long freight trains often cause delays 110 111 Two roundabouts in the Melbourne metropolitan area Highett Victoria 112 and Hampton 113 have heavy rail crossing the roundabout and through the inner circle Boom barriers protect the railway from oncoming traffic at the appropriate points in the roundabout At the Driescher Kreisel 114 in Bergisch Gladbach Germany a railway serving a nearby paper factory crosses a roundabout located next to a shopping centre and pedestrian zone The flow of traffic and pedestrians is governed by 14 barriers 22 traffic lights and 8 loudspeakers The barriers close three times daily for 7 minutes to allow trains to pass In New Zealand s South Island two roundabouts join major roads where a railway cuts through One is at the intersection between State Highway 1 as Sinclair Street and Main Street from the east and Main Street from the west Park Terrace and Redwood Street in the city of Blenheim Here the Main North Line bisects the roundabout and separates Park Terrace and Main Street eastbound from the rest of the roundabout 115 The other roundabout is located at Kumara Junction on the West Coast where the Hokitika Branch separates State Highway 6 southbound from SH 6 northbound and SH 73 116 Both roundabouts are controlled by flashing red lights with additional boom barriers at the Blenheim roundabout Through roundabout Edit Also known as a hamburger roundabout these junctions are signalised and have a straight through section of carriageway for one of the major routes The hamburger name derives from the fact that the plan view resembles the cross section through a hamburger The United Kingdom has examples on the A580 East Lancashire Road in St Helens on Haydock Island in Merseyside 117 which also features the M6 passing overhead and on the Astley Boothstown border 118 More examples are the A6003 at Kettering the A538 near Manchester Airport the Showcase junction on A329 at Winnersh Berkshire 119 and the A63 A1079 Mytongate junction in Hull Examples also exist in Bracknell Hull 120 Bramcote in Nottinghamshire and Reading as well as on the N2 M50 intersection in Dublin Ireland In Perth Western Australia one is found at the intersection of Alexander Drive Morley Drive and The Strand 121 Throughabouts are very common in Spain where they are called raquetas Spanish for tennis racket or glorieta rotonda partida split roundabout 122 Throughabout Throughabout road sign in the Netherlands 51 51 02 N 5 49 54 E 51 850517 N 5 831576 E 51 850517 5 831576 Throughabout road sign in Australia 31 53 25 S 115 52 12 E 31 8902952 S 115 8698988 E 31 8902952 115 8698988Only bicycle pedestrian roundabouts Edit The same features that make roundabouts attractive for roadway junctions led to their use at junctions of multi use trails The University of California Davis 123 original research and Stanford University as well as the Cape Cod and Old Colony rail trails have bicycle pedestrian roundabouts A roundabout along the Clear Creek Trail in Bloomington Indiana connects the main trail to its spur Roundabouts are used on off road bicycle trails in Florida Colorado Alaska and Wisconsin 124 125 126 An elevated roundabout is located in Eindhoven serving pedestrian and bicycle traffic only above the main conventional roadway intersection It is known as the Hovenring See also EditFor the at grade intersection design analogous to dumbbell and dogbone interchanges see Bowtie road Complete streets Direction of traffic History of road transport History of street lighting in the United States History of roads in Ireland Level of service Leif Ourston an early proponent of roundabouts in the United States Roundabout Appreciation Society Roundabout dog Traffic congestionNotes Edit There is also a branch line immediately north of the roundabout going west and an additional tram stop on that branch References Edit a b The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary Volume 2 Clarendon Press Oxford 1993 page 2632 a b c d U S Department of Transportation 2013 para 1 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ourston Leif Bared Joe G 1995 Roundabouts A Direct Way to Safer Highways Public Roads Federal Highway Administration 59 2 41 49 Retrieved 20 October 2020 Roundabout Benefits Washington State Department of Transportation Retrieved 12 July 2014 Hesch Maxine Quantitatively Determining the Emissions Reduction Benefits of the Replacement of a Signalized Intersection by a Roundabout PDF New York State Department of Transportation Retrieved 6 October 2013 a b c d Roundabouts IIHS HLDI crash testing and highway safety Roundabout Rules of the Road Archived from the original on 9 January 2014 Retrieved 12 January 2014 P M Wolf Eugene Henard and the Beginning of Urbanism in Paris 1900 1914 International Federation for Housing and Planning The Hague 1969 cited by Ben Hamilton Baillie and Phil Jones Improving traffic behaviour and safety through urban design Proceedings of ICE Civil Engineering volume 158 Issue 5 May 2005 p 41 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 July 2007 Retrieved 10 October 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Verhoeven Dolly red 2009 De Canon van Nijmegen Nijmegen Uitgeverij Vantilt p 131 ISBN 9789460040351 Was alles in Gorlitz erfunden wurde Alles Lausitz de Alles Lausitz de in German Archived from the original on 7 August 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2017 http twofeet weebly com walking blog the five circles of hanchett park The Five Circles of Hanchett Park 7 June 2014 BBC News 2 November 2004 Roundabout Magic Retrieved 13 May 2007 Letchworth Garden City Heritage Foundation Sign of the Times Archived from the original on 16 October 2006 Retrieved 14 December 2006 a b National Academies of Sciences Engineering 4 December 2010 Roundabouts An Informational Guide 2nd ed doi 10 17226 22914 ISBN 978 0 309 15511 3 a b c d e Christine Beldon 17 December 2019 Why The U S Hates Roundabouts Cheddar Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 18 April 2021 Frank Blackmore traffic engineer and inventor of the mini roundabout The Times London 14 June 2008 Retrieved 15 June 2008 Ourston Roundabout Engineering Inc 13 January 2010 Leif Ourston receives Frank Blackmore Award Ourston com Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Clint Pumphrey How Roundabouts Work howstuffworks com a b c d Kooman Bas March 2001 De rotonde Veilig rondjes rijden Kampioen in Dutch 116 3 65 66 a b Tollazzi Tomaz 2014 Alternative Types of Roundabouts An Informational Guide Cham Springer p 110 ISBN 9783319090849 Retrieved 18 April 2021 a b c Keh Andreh 18 November 2010 European Import Has Cars Spinning Heads Too The New York Times Retrieved 19 November 2010 Wylie Ian 19 October 2015 Traffic lights are so dictatorial but are roundabouts on the way out The Guardian Retrieved 13 February 2020 RoundaboutsUSA Archived from the original on 19 September 2000 Roselli Dayna 18 April 2007 Roundabouts lasvegasnow com Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 14 October 2014 a b Tom Geoghegan 1 July 2011 Is the British roundabout conquering the US BBC website Retrieved 1 July 2011 Modern Roundabout Practice in the United States PDF Retting Richard A Kyrychenko Sergey Y McCartt Anne T 2007 Long Term Trends in Public Opinion Following Construction of Roundabouts Journal of the Transportation Research Board 2019 219 224 doi 10 3141 2019 26 S2CID 110914100 WSDOT Washington s Roundabouts 11 October 2016 Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 17 October 2018 Roundabouts an informational guide PDF Turner Fairbank Highway Research Center 16 November 2017 Archived from the original on 12 January 2009 Retrieved 5 December 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link What lane should I use on a roundabout AXA ie AXA 16 November 2017 Retrieved 16 November 2017 New Jersey roundabouts PDF Capuzzo Jill P 25 November 2007 A Shift but for Some Drivers a Vicious Circle The New York Times Retrieved 27 March 2010 Google Drum Hill Rotary Map Google Maps Google American Heritage Archived 26 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine roundabout Chiefly British A traffic circle Random House roundabout Chiefly Brit See traffic circle Merriam Webster roundabout noun British rotary 2 rotary 2 a road junction formed around a central circle about which traffic moves in one direction only called also circle traffic circle Macmillan roundabout a circular area where three or more roads meet that you have to drive around in one direction in order to get onto another road The American word is traffic circle or rotary 1 roundabout UK US traffic circle Concise Oxford rotary N Amer a traffic roundabout Safety Aspects of Roundabouts FHWA Safety Program 3 September 2014 Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2018 General Law Part I Title XIV Chapter 89 Section 8 malegislature gov Retrieved 17 October 2018 Rhode Island Driver s Manual PDF Dmv ri gov Retrieved 17 October 2018 Scottish words of the week The Dundee dialect www scotsman com 4 October 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2020 Jersey States of Government of Jersey gov je Intersection Safety Roundabouts Safety Federal Highway Administration Safety fhwa dot gov February 2010 Retrieved 17 October 2018 Kittleson amp Associates Kansas Roundabout Guide A Supplement to FHWA s Roundabouts An Informational Guide PDF Kansas Department of Transportation Retrieved 26 August 2009 PDF https www state nj us mvc pdf license drivermanual pdf Retrieved 13 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Commonwealth of Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles Sharing the Road A User s Manual for Public Ways Retrieved 13 May 2009 Vehicle amp Traffic Law Right of Way 3 July 2011 Archived from the original on 3 July 2011 Retrieved 17 October 2018 a b c Index Roundabout An Informational Guide June 2000 FHWA RD 00 067 Fhwa dot gov Retrieved 17 October 2018 TSM https en wikisource org wiki Traffic Signs Manual Chapter 5 2009 8 Shashi S Nambisan Venu Parimi March 2007 A Comparative Evaluation of the Safety Performance of Roundabouts and Traditional Intersection Controls Institute of Transportation Engineers Retrieved 27 November 2007 Underlien Jensen Soren November 2012 Rundkorsler og trafiksikkerhed PDF Trafik amp Veje in Danish 26 29 sep 2020 Clock 20 Journalist kl 09 01 Bemaerk Artiklen er mere end 30 dage gammel Sebastian Myrup Hansen Renovering af omdiskuteret rundkorsel er i gang ikke godt nok mener korelaerer TV 2 Lorry in Danish Retrieved 27 January 2022 Hansen Winnie 2 June 2019 Sporg Fagfolket Hvorfor skal oen i midten af rundkorslen vaere sa hoj Ingenioren in Danish Vejdirektoratet analysis of 332 roundabouts It was very clear that if the height in the middle of the roundabout was over two meters then it was much safer than other designs The accident rate was significantly lower in the high roundabouts Art In Public Places Bend Oregon Art in Public Places Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Pillar of art PDF Art in Public Places Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Fuerteventura art on the roads roundabouts as galleries Roberto Alborghetti 2 July 2012 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Google Photographs of French roundabouts Map Google Maps Google a b c Google Roundabout photographs from The Netherlands Belgium Germany and Austria Map Google Maps Google Google Roundabout photographs from Italy Map Google Maps Google Google Roundabout photographs from Spain Map Google Maps Google a b Unusual road roundabouts artistic and otherwise A collection of more than 2000 photographs by almost 200 amateur photographers from all over the world Panoramio Roundabouts www panoramio com Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Roundabout Kreisverkehr streets with a roundabout Strassen mit einem Kreisverkehr Flickr in English and German www flickr com Retrieved 2 November 2013 Inventory of French roundabouts in French Marc Lescuyer Archived from the original on 11 November 2008 Retrieved 1 January 2010 Laws and Rules of the Road Landingpage Factsheet topics www swov nl PDF a b Modern Roundabouts an Informational Guide Federal Highway Administration Research and Technology Retrieved 15 September 2015 FHWA MUTCD 2003 Edition Chapter 3B2 mutcd fhwa dot gov R Schnull J Lange I Fabian M Kolle F Schutte D Alrutz H W Fechtel J Stellmacher Hein T Bruckner H Meyhofer Sicherung von Radfahrern an stadtischen Knotenpunkten Safeguarding bicyclists in Urban Intersections Bericht der Bundesanstalt fur Strassenwesen zum Forschungsprojekt 8952 1992 Vortragsfolien Radverkehr Scroll to the section labelled Kreisverkehr A translation of the text reads Graphic from Sicherung von Radfahrern an stadtischen Knotenpunkten Safeguarding cyclists in Urban Intersections BASt 1992 Accident numbers in large circular junctions with different bicycle facilities show 1 Why there should be no pathways or bike lanes at these junctions 2 Even when cyclists use the roadway their risk is relatively high at these junctions Maycock G and Hall R D 1984 Accidents at 4 Arm Roundabouts TRRL1120 Transport and Road Research Laboratory TRRL Crowthorne England Roundabouts ADOT azdot gov Taylor M P Barton E V Bliss J and O Brien A P 1993 Effectiveness Audit of ARRB Intersection Capacity Research Research Report ARR 242 ARRB Transport Research Ltd Vermont South Australia Archived from the original on 27 February 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link TRB 2016 Highway Capacity Manual Sixth Edition A Guide for Multimodal Mobility Analysis Transportation Research Board National Research Council Washington DC US TRB Roundabouts An Informational Guide NCHRP Report 672 Transportation Research Board National Research Council Washington D C US in cooperation with US Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link TRB 2016 2016 Roundabout Practice A Synthesis of Highway Practice National Cooperative Highway Research Program NCHRP SYNTHESIS 488 Washington DC US doi 10 17226 23477 ISBN 978 0 309 27208 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Nambisan Shashi S Parimi Venu March 2007 A Comparative Evaluation of the Safety Performance of Roundabouts and Traditional Intersection Controls Institute of Transportation Engineers Status Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 9 June 2014 Richtmeyer Richard 6 January 2008 Safer Roundabouts Sprouting Up All Over New York Nation Associated Press Archived from the original on 15 December 2012 Retrieved 10 January 2008 Roundabouts Topic overview Insurance Institute for Highway Safety Wijnands J S Zhao H Nice K A Thompson J Scully K Guo J Stevenson M 2020 Identifying safe intersection design through unsupervised feature extraction from satellite imagery Computer Aided Civil and Infrastructure Engineering 36 3 346 361 arXiv 2010 15343 doi 10 1111 mice 12623 S2CID 225103031 PDF Wilke A and Koorey G 2001 How Safe are Roundabouts for Cyclists In TranSafe Issue 5 April 2001 Wellington NZ PDF Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Crash analysis system Retrieved 29 November 2007 Campbell D Jurisich I Dunn R 2006 Improved multi lane roundabout designs for cyclists Land Transport New Zealand Research Report 287 140 pp PDF Pedestrian Access to Modern Roundabouts Design and Operational Issues for Pedestrians who are Blind retrieved 6 26 2010 access board gov Archived 31 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bill Baranowski P E Pedestrian Crosswalk Signals at Roundabouts Where are they Applicable History of Roundabouts Archived from the original on 27 January 2008 Retrieved 29 November 2007 Transport for London https tfl gov uk info for media press releases 2014 november tottenham hale improvement works complete Rhodes Belinda 21 June 2008 Frank Blackmore Determined maverick traffic engineer who invented the mini roundabout The Guardian Retrieved 7 October 2013 The Highway Code Roundabouts Retrieved 14 May 2009 Section 188 referring to Road Traffic Act 1988 Section 36 and Traffic Signs Regulations amp General Directions 2002 Regulations 10 1 amp 16 1 Turborotonde en turboplein ontwerp capaciteit en veiligheid Turbo Roundabout and Turbo Circle Design Capacity and Safety in Dutch Delft University of Technology 8 January 2013 Retrieved 16 October 2014 Turborotondes CROW Archived from the original on 26 September 2017 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Benefits of Turboroundabouts Transoft Solutions Inc 2014 Retrieved 16 October 2014 a b Vos Christiaan 31 January 2016 Effecten realisatie turborotonde onderzocht Effects research of turbo roundabouts Verkeer Verkeersveiligheid Vorm Traffic Safety Form in Dutch Dirk de Baan Archived from the original on 28 January 2017 Retrieved 28 January 2017 Isaak Yperman Ben Immers 2003 Capacity of a turbo roundabout determined by micro simulation Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Department of Civil Engineering Transportation Planning and Highway Engineering Archived from the original pdf on 27 December 2016 Alt URL Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways Part 3 Markings PDF U S Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration 2003 For sources and references see the separate article on this tunnel and its roundabout Video Eerste rit over het nieuwe knooppunt Joure Leeuwarder Courant UK Department for Transport Signal Controlled Roundabouts LTN 1 09 Ibanez Guillermo 2020 Synchronous Roundabouts with Rotating Priority Sectors SYROPS High Capacity and Safety for Conventional and Autonomous Vehicles Electronics 9 10 1726 doi 10 3390 electronics9101726 Frank Blackmore traffic engineer and inventor of the mini roundabout The Times London 14 June 2008 Retrieved 15 June 2008 Swindon s Magic Roundabout from the air retrieved 23 March 2022 In Depth The Magic Roundabout CBRD 22 November 2005 Archived from the original on 7 January 2012 Retrieved 12 January 2012 Brits vote on the best and worst roundabouts Easier com 20 December 2005 retrieved 18 January 2008 World s worst junctions revealed Auto Express 10 Scariest Junctions in the UK BBC 27 November 2009 Google High Wycombe Map Google Maps Google Google Hatton Cross Map Google Maps Google SABRE Magic Gyratory 8 November 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2013 King Mel 1 December 2020 Essex town to make history with county s first Dutch roundabout EssexLive Retrieved 23 March 2022 5 minutes of traffic on a Dutch roundabout with bi directional cycling lanes retrieved 23 March 2022 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2019 Retrieved 19 October 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Vitezne namesti Prague trams fun web Google 15 January 2012 Roundabout Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 15 January 2012 Jensen Beach Roundabouts Charrette Archived from the original on 21 November 2008 Retrieved 16 October 2007 145 039044269836 37 9447586507931 Australia Mapsearch 144 9930580000 amp 37 9200150000 Australia Mapsearch Der Driescher Kreisel Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Google 15 January 2012 Blenheim Roundabout Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 15 January 2012 Google 15 January 2012 Kumara Junction Roundabout Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 15 January 2012 Google Haydock Island in Merseyside Map Google Maps Google Google Astley Boothstown border Roundabout Map Google Maps Google a href Template Cite map html title Template Cite map cite map a Check url value help Google Winnersh Berkshire Map Google Maps Google Google Mytongate on the A63 in Hull Map Google Maps Google Google Morley and Alexander Drive Map Google Maps Google Como circular en una Glorieta Partida raqueta Autoescuela Miguel Blog in Spanish Archived from the original on 17 October 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2014 Explanation in the website of a driving school Google Davis Ca Map Google Maps Google Shaw Jeffrey and Moler Steve Bicyclist and Pedestrian Only Roundabouts Public Roads magazine January February 2009 Archived 10 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Federal Highway Administration Research and Technology Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on 23 September 2006 Retrieved 5 September 2006 Bicycle roundabout sits at intersection of 3 bike paths The Capital Times Sources EditU S Department of Transportation 2013 Roundabouts an Informational Guide PDF Stenquist Paul 20 August 2020 All About Roundabouts The New York Times Retrieved 29 August 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roundabouts City of Carmel Indiana USA Roundabouts page showing raindrop roundabouts or dogbone interchanges Car Free America Roundabout Safety and Design Guide Video of Highway Roundabout in Canada TRL The UK s Transport research Laboratory Modern Roundabouts Geocoded National Database Mini roundabouts Getting them Right Turbo Roundabout Simulation Roundabout Benefits from the Washington State Department of Transportation Highway Roundabouts from the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Roundabouts Now Benefits of a Turboroundabout Modern Roundabout Practice in the United States from Transportation Research Board Proceedings from the Transportation Research Board Standing Committee on Roundabouts ANB75 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roundabout amp oldid 1135628790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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