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Safety Effectiveness Evaluation of Raised Pedestrian Crossings in Ho Chi Minh City
- Source :
- Journal of Road Safety, Vol 32, Iss 3, Pp 43-48 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Australasian College of Road Safety, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Traffic crashes are one of the immediate and long-term serious problems all over the world including Vietnam. Speed is one of the direct causes of a crash. In recent years, Ho Chi Minh City has synchronously implemented many measures to manage speed, in particular, a pilot implementation of raised pedestrian crossing measures at many locations in the city. Technical efficiency assessment of this measure is necessary to help the city build more scientific evidence for scaling up successful measures. This study was conducted at four locations on Ton Duc Thang Street, District 1, with four vehicle groups including motorbikes, cars, trucks, and buses. The results indicate that this measure had a positive effect on V85 speed with four group of vehicles at 35.5km/h or more. The effectiveness was stronger for greater widths of raised pedestrian crossing i.e., more effective at 10.5m of raised pedestrian crossings width than 7.5m. This measure reduces V85 speed of vehicles by nearly 14% on 10.5m of raised pedestrian crossings width, and positive impacts are highest for cars (13.93%), and lowest for trucks (6.54%). While traffic volume and the surrounding context may impact on the result, they are not considered in this study. These results provide important scientific evidence for scaling up this measure city wide in the future.
- Subjects :
- 050210 logistics & transportation
Road engineering
Computer science
Accident prevention
05 social sciences
General Medicine
Pedestrian
Pedestrian crossing
Ho chi minh
Transport engineering
Geography
Environmental health
0502 economics and business
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Vehicle type
Highway engineering
Transportation and communications
050107 human factors
Safety effectiveness
HE1-9990
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 26524260 and 26524252
- Volume :
- 32
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Road Safety
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....76ed9c5972f99cec5f73ee036e16338f