Tuesday, February 3, 2015

A draft manifesto for pedestrian traffic signal policy

Current US standard traffic signal engineering practice does not create acceptable walking environments. Digital signal controllers with required pushbutton wiring for audible signals and mandated minimum crossing times have permanently disrupted the old uneasy peace in which the cheapest, easiest thing to install was traffic signals that paid little specific attention to pedestrians but also asked nothing from them.

In today's world, what engineering policies would, if followed, create intersections that are acceptable both to pedestrians and to engineers?

Here is what I wrote earlier today in a SeeClickFix ticket, whittled down from a longer and more nuanced list from a few months ago.

  • Every green light phase that is long enough for a safe pedestrian crossing shall be accompanied by a walk signal.
  • Every crosswalk that receives 50 or more pedestrian crossings during the peak hour shall receive a walk signal as part of every signal cycle all day.
  • When a crosswalk button is pushed while the light is green for the parallel roadway, that crosswalk shall immediately be given a walk signal rather than being required to wait until the next cycle.

Is it the right list? Here are the rationales and some potential objections:




Actuation not required at green lights that are already long enough


Of these points, I think the first is both the most important and the most difficult to justify denying. It has no impact on timing, only on permission. If the light is already going to be green long enough for people to cross, they should be able to cross.

The objection is that in a truly demand-driven situation, it may not be known at the beginning of the green light how long the light will stay green. Should I complicate things by acknowledging this, or trust that in the US it is rare for it to matter?

(The Boston objection is that intersections with more than 250 turning vehicles per hour—which is to say, an intersection with an unusually high rate of turns or of streets with more than two lanes—should have an exclusive walk phase instead of filtering the turns through the crosswalk. Do any other cities care about this?)


Actuation not required for crosswalks that are busy enough


The second point takes advantage of the fact that engineers often admit that "downtown" has to accommodate pedestrians all the time, and tries to redirect the concept of "downtown" to refer to a level of activity rather than to an arbitrary geographic region.

The objection is that it contains a magic number, 50, and a generalization from peak hour to all day.  The intent is for 50 per hour per crosswalk to signify a level of pedestrian activity above which, if your timing scheme depends upon pedestrians not being present, it won't work anyway, so you might as well take them into account by default. It is also intended as a concession: 75% of intersections in Oakland do not meet this standard and probably shouldn't actually assume that pedestrians will be present constantly.

Is 50 the correct number from either perspective? And can engineers accept the idea that if a street has pedestrian life at some times of day, it should be treated as if it does even at slow times?


Responsiveness where actuation is required


The third point is a fundamental principle of user interface design: if someone requests an action, their request must be acknowledged immediately and accomplished quickly. If the light for parallel vehicles is already green, it is difficult for someone wanting to cross to perceive any reasonable justification for delay, so the walk signal should begin immediately.

One objection is that lengthening a green light might disrupt coordination, if other vehicles on the cross street have already been dispatched from another signal expecting to receive a green at this one. The other is safety: if a vehicle has already begun to turn, its driver may not see the walk light and may not expect a pedestrian.

Some installations work around these problems by taking the button press as an instruction to immediately end the green light rather than to begin the walk signal. Is that better?


Not enough? Too much?


In the attempt to keep it short, I haven't said anything about how transit priority should work (by sensing the bus when it's still a block away so the light can be held green for it) or about maximum cycle length (probably a minute and a half) or turn arrow phasing (after the walk phase, not before) or responsiveness during red (should immediately begin clearance of the direction with the green) or anything else. Do I need to?

What do you think the list should be?

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Thoughts on resilience from New Orleans

Steph and I spent last week in New Orleans. Everything I saw brought to mind thoughts about infrastructure, engineering, and resilience, but perhaps not for the reason you would expect.

Certainly the memory of Hurricane Katrina is strong. Everywhere you go, streets are torn up for projects to keep the city from flooding again.



But as important as emergency infrastructure is, there is also an overwhelming sense that the infrastructure that serves citizens every day is essentially unmaintained and crumbling. Even as this public works crew fixes a streetlight, the traffic signal below is missing four of its six visors, and on the opposite corner, behind me, the pole for the signal isn't even standing any more.



This corner isn't an exception. Nearly every signal in the city is in equally bad shape. Pedestrian signals are especially broken, typically showing nothing at all or both a "walk" person and a "don't walk" red hand at the same time, to the confusion of anyone who tries to pay attention to them.



And yet the city continues to work. How?

It works because the city has done essentially no traffic engineering since the 1930s.

I don't mean that every piece of infrastructure is actually that old. Certainly every sign has been replaced since then, and probably every signal has too, and almost every street has been repaved. But their forms and behaviors remain old and simple, so when they aren't maintained, they degrade gracefully instead of catastrophically.



Let me explain. There are two basic forms of streets in old New Orleans: the street and the boulevard. The street has one or two traffic lanes (sometimes one-way) and parking on both sides. The boulevard has a grassy median ("the neutral ground") and one, two, or rarely three traffic lanes, plus parking, on either side. A streetcar may run through the neutral ground.

And that's all. There are no streets with three or more lanes without a median. There are no turn lanes. There is frequently no lane striping. There is no attempt to increase speed or capacity or access or priority or "level of service" or anything else.

There are traffic signals only where a boulevard or an especially busy street meets another boulevard or busy street. Everywhere else, there are two-way stops that give priority to the major street. There are almost no pedestrian signals or turn arrows. There is no need for them, because the signals run on old, simple, mechanical controllers with fixed, 60-second cycles, and if you don't get all the way across a major street, you can wait a short time in the median.

And with this infrastructure, about as simple as it possibly could be, everyone still gets where they are going.



It all changes when you reach the edge of the traditional city, and you can feel the difference. A road with wide lanes, turn lanes, and a double-yellow stripe instead of a large, comfortable median, is not a place where it's pleasant to linger, in spite of all of the signs and markings that are meant to make it better for pedestrians.



We immediately made our way back to an older neighborhood, where the infrastructure achieves "pride, dignity, and resilience," as the sign below says, by not trying so hard.

Wouldn't it be great if every city made its streets simple and comfortable instead of complicated and fragile? New Orleans proves it can work, and that "dumb" infrastructure will keep on working as other systems around it fail.



More photos from New Orleans