Abstract

The need for improving urban road safety, livability, and sustainability is evident. Quantitative estimates and qualitative methods/strategies can be used by road safety practitioners to design safety interventions. This study proposes a flexible integrated design framework for safety interventions on existing urban road segments and intersections that integrates quantitative and qualitative methods. The proposed design framework is divided into four stages of the safety management process: End of Network Screening, Diagnosis, Selection of Countermeasures, and Economic Assessment. Pilot applications of the proposed method were performed on existing roads of the urban road network of the Municipality of Bari, Italy. Results from the application were useful to highlight some possible problems in the different stages of the design process. In particular, the discussed problems include a lack of crash and traffic data, difficulties with defining the road functional classifications, including rural-to-urban transitions, a lack of local inspection procedures, the recurrent problems from diagnosis, difficulties regarding the safety assessment of cycling infrastructures and sight distances, the criteria for grouping countermeasures into sets, and the choice of appropriate predictive methods. In response, appropriate solutions to the highlighted problems were presented. The usefulness of the proposed method for both practitioners and researchers was shown.

Highlights

  • Persons killed in urban crashes account on average for about 15,000 deaths per year in the European Union (EU-28: 1999–2014 data [1])

  • The proposed design framework for safety interventions on existing urban roads was applied to a case study composed of different pilot applications

  • Crash data belong to the National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), and they were provided by the local agency ASSET [57]

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Summary

Introduction

Persons killed in urban crashes account on average for about 15,000 deaths per year in the European Union (EU-28: 1999–2014 data [1]). Frameworks for the design of safety-based interventions on existing urban roads should include quantitative estimation methods. They may help practitioners design and assess those interventions. Qualitative methods and fundamental road safety macro-level strategies are complementary tools to be included in frameworks for the design of safety-based interventions on existing urban roads. Even if predictive methods may be useful, the EU Directive [25] does not provide their use (such as in some local implementations [26]) This latter example presents detailed guidelines on safety inspections to be performed and variables to be assessed

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