Abstract

The road safety of vulnerable users is a current issue; in densely populated areas, the use of alternative and light mobility vehicles is growing in popularity, and their users conflict with vehicles having larger dimensions and masses. This study focuses on the risk analysis of collision between bicyclists and motorized vehicles in urban intersections. Twenty-five urban four-leg intersections, with and without bike paths, were considered in order to identify the conflict points, calculate their hazardousness, and assess the risk of collision using a probabilistic approach. Traffic light setup, yield line retraction, design of areas, and counter-clockwise circulation reserved for bicyclists are the geometrical and functional approaches proposed to mitigate the risk of collision. Two risk-based approaches proposed by the authors were implemented—the first examines all identified conflict points, while the second assesses the risk condition of the overall intersection. The obtained results show that the number of conflict points varied between 32 and 112 and the risk of collision varied between 4.57 × 10−2 and 2.46 × 10−1. The proposed assessment allowed us to make an objective comparison between the possible layouts for various traffic mixes and design conditions, and to identify the most effective solutions. Significant differences in terms of risk were found. Each mitigation strategy should be motivated by a reasoned decision considering the different needs of all road users, traffic demand, and geometrical and functional constraints.

Highlights

  • Statistics on road crashes have shown a reduction in the number of fatalities and injuries in recent years, road safety still remains a current issue [1]

  • This paper assesses the risk of collision between motorized vehicles and bicycles in different geometrical and functional layouts of a four-leg urban intersection where all users can perform all types of maneuvers and all the users arrivals/headways are independent of each other

  • Three starting layouts were examined with consideration of the number and hazardousness of conflict points, the reaction time available to drivers of motorized vehicles to avoid crash, and the current level of collision risk

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Summary

Introduction

Statistics on road crashes have shown a reduction in the number of fatalities and injuries in recent years, road safety still remains a current issue [1]. Data available in the literature [2] show that the exposure to crash risk for road users is much more than the exposure to natural or anthropogenic events for citizens. Compared to a few years ago, the specific features of road crashes are quite different. A couple of decades ago, road safety policies were geared to address the speed and high crash rates of highway networks. The general underestimation of crash phenomena and their social consequences is still high [3], these aspects appear to be much less critical, and new problems and some specific aspects have emerged in light of new evidence. The mobility of “vulnerable users” (i.e., pedestrians and bicyclists) is a critical issue, especially in densely populated areas [4]

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