Skip to main content
Intended for healthcare professionals
Restricted access
Research article
First published January 2000

Power of the Line: Shared-Use Path Conflict Reduction

Abstract

Painting a yellow center line at blind curves on a busy multiuser path (bicyclists, pedestrians, in-line skaters, runners) decreased the percentage of people who “went the wrong way” on the path, in a before-and-after study whose sample size was 2,147. A busy 3.6-m (12-ft) paved recreational and commuting path in Philadelphia circles the Schuylkill River for 13.5 km (8.4 mi). There are numerous blind curves caused by hedges, rock outcrops, and bridge piers. Many people were traveling on the wrong side around sharp blind curves. Counts were taken and video-tapes made in order to determine the percentage of bicyclists, pedestrians, in-line skaters, and runners on the proper side, on the wrong side, and passing on the wrong side. Then a solid-yellow center line and directional arrows were neatly spray painted at the blind curves, and after counts were taken. The percentage of wrong-side travel fell from 35 percent to 15 percent, a 57 percent reduction. White lines and arrows were placed at driveways and road crossings. The white lines reduced wrongway travel from 30 percent to 10 percent, a reduction of 66 percent. Painted center lines kept people on the proper side and reduced the likelihood of conflicts and crashes. Paint is easy, fast, and inexpensive, and creates no physical obstacle; it is hard to damage and it works without education of the public.

Get full access to this article

View all access and purchase options for this article.

Cite article

Cite article

Cite article

OR

Download to reference manager

If you have citation software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice

Share options

Share

Share this article

Share with email
EMAIL ARTICLE LINK
Share on social media

Share access to this article

Sharing links are not relevant where the article is open access and not available if you do not have a subscription.

For more information view the Sage Journals article sharing page.

Information, rights and permissions

Information

Published In

Article first published: January 2000
Issue published: January 2000

Rights and permissions

© 2000 National Academy of Sciences.
Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Gihon Jordan
Philadelphia Traffic Engineering, 980 Municipal Services Building, 1401 JFK Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA 19102
Larry Leso
26 Riviera Drive, Woodberry, NJ 08096

Metrics and citations

Metrics

Journals metrics

This article was published in Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board.

VIEW ALL JOURNAL METRICS

Article usage*

Total views and downloads: 77

*Article usage tracking started in December 2016


Altmetric

See the impact this article is making through the number of times it’s been read, and the Altmetric Score.
Learn more about the Altmetric Scores



Articles citing this one

Receive email alerts when this article is cited

Web of Science: 0

Crossref: 10

  1. Movement Patterns of Pedestrians and Cyclists at Signalized Segregated...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  2. Space sharing between pedestrians and micro-mobility vehicles: A syste...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  3. Bridge Safety
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  4. Investigating factors that influence pedestrian and cyclist violations...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  5. Cycling on the edge: the effects of edge lines, slanted kerbstones, sh...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  6. The impact of environmental factors on cycling speed on shared paths
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  7. An investigation of behaviour and attitudes relevant to the user safet...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  8. The impact of transportation infrastructure on bicycling injuries and ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  9. Evaluating the Safety of Shared-Use Paths...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  10. Evaluation of Pedestrian Data Needs and Collection Efforts
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar

Figures and tables

Figures & Media

Tables

View Options

Get access

Access options

If you have access to journal content via a personal subscription, university, library, employer or society, select from the options below:


Alternatively, view purchase options below:

Purchase 24 hour online access to view and download content.

Access journal content via a DeepDyve subscription or find out more about this option.

View options

PDF/ePub

View PDF/ePub