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A newly published guide to street design sets out the latest thinking on how roads and streets in cities, towns and villages can be decluttered and redesigned to make them not only pleasanter to look at and to use, but also significantly safer.

Street Design for All - "a compilation of current thoughts and practices in the art of Street Design" - reflects the work and ideas of professional road engineers and of campaigners for improvements to the "public realm".1  It provides an easy to understand explanation of how established urban street design practices that were intended to improve safety have in many cases had the opposite effect.

The innovative new approaches to street design that the booklet describes have been proven to reduce casualties without causing additional traffic congestion.  In addition, by enhancing the attractiveness of the public realm they encourage people to regard urban streets as places to visit rather than just to pass through, bringing benefits in terms of both economic and psychological wellbeing.

Significantly, the new guide has been endorsed by Robert Goodwill, the Minister for Transport, who has recommended its use by local community groups to help them contribute to the redesign of their localities.

The arguments set out in the booklet include the following points:

A running theme is the importance of "decluttering".  Apart from the obvious aesthetic benefits of reducing the amount of intrusive street furniture, road safety is actually increased by dispensing with the proliferation of signs, road markings, traffic lights etc.  These are all intended to reduce the likelihood of accidents, but paradoxically, because they increase driver confidence, they lead to increased speeds and decreased driver vigilance, and hence to more collisions with worse consequences.  Better to design "self-explaining roads" - roads that on the one hand will reduce driver confidence, making them slow down and become more vigilant, while in the other hand making it easier for them to see potential problems because their attention is not distracted by a large number of signs and markings. 

pedestrian injuries vs speedThe author is clear about the importance of keeping down vehicle speeds in contexts where they are likely to come into conflict with pedestrians.  The chance of a pedestrian being killed or seriously injured in an accident involving  a vehicle travelling at 20 mph is less than 3%, if the vehicle’s speed is 30 mph the likelihood is 20%. Where the speed is 40 mph, it rises to 90%. - the accompanying graph speaks for itself.

The booklet contains sections on streetscape and creating a sense of place and goes into some detail with regard to the design of pedestrian crossings, the best types of paving slabs and "street corner geometry" (an important aspect of pedestrian safety).

It concludes with some advice about undertaking local projects and assessing whether the correct balance has been struck between road safety and other considerations.

1 Street Design for All by Colin J Davis, published by CJDA Ltd for PRIAN 2014.  Available for free download from this link.  The publication was issued jointly by the Public Realm Information & Advice Network (PRIAN),  the Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation (CIHT), Civic Voice and the Department for Transport, with assistance from English Heritage, the Institute of Highway Engineers, Living Streets, the National Heart Forum, Transport for London and the Urban Design Group.

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David March posted a reply
06 Dec 2014 10:44
Basil - excellent review of this interesting guidance.

Colin Davis has a long established track record of promoting 'common sense' solutions to street design, and one which breaks across the different 'professional' approaches to street design. I hope Enfield gets Colin Davis to give a seminar to all officers involved in different aspects of street design - perhaps the Triangle would be a useful case study for the workshop. I only live in hope!
Karl Brown posted a reply
15 Dec 2014 16:16
Park Lane Poynton

A poem by Ian McMillan, written for the eighth edition of the Space Place Life publication of The Academy of Urbanisation to celebrate inspirational places of urbanisation which people have worked hard to nurture over many years.

I couldn’t have written this poem a few years since;
I couldn’t have read it out. There’s no way you’d have heard it
The noise of the traffic was enough to make you wince
And if you think about Shared Space then this weren’t it.
And I’m writing in a language that’s local and demotic
To describe a transformation from red stop lights
To a place that’s welcoming and truly democratic
From a stuck traffic jam to a Transport of Delights
Because this is a truly local answer to a problem that
Scarred a lovely village and cut it clean in two
So if you wanted to cross to the barber’s from your flat
It would be quicker if he posted the scissors to you!
Now the traffic slows, the people walk; space is truly shared,
Poynton’s been completely changed. My poem can be heard.

You can watch Poynton’s transformation here


Making a success of a Town Centre is so much more than its trade base and its immediate (car) parking spaces. Poynton certainly addressed some of the (much) wider aspects. Happy people it seems.
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