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Journal Article

Citation

Pourteau C. ITE J. 2009; 79(4): 42-43.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Institute of Transportation Engineers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Houston Metro's "Red Line" is a 7.5 mile stretch of light-rail transit that runs through the city. Because several crashes have occurred on the Red Line involving passenger and light-rail vehicles, researchers are evaluating several technologies to supplement standard traffic control devices at the light-rail transit crossings. The goal is to reduce driver behavior that may lead to crashes, such as creeping into the grade crossing, running red lights or making a prohibited right turn on red. The effectiveness of an illuminated stop bar, which is a line of red light-emitting diode (LED) lights placed in the pavement in front of the traditional white painted stop bar, is being evaluated to minimize the encroachment issue. The red pavement lights turn on when the traffic signal indication is solid red. Researchers are also evaluating the use of a red LED outline on the backplate around the traffic signal head to see whether drivers paid more attention to the signal with the outlined backplate. Although another year of testing is planned, the research team has found that the illuminated stop bars have reduced right-turn-on-red violations. The illuminated backplates have also reduced both red light-running and right-turn-on-red violations, suggesting that the devices under evaluation may be effective at improving safety.

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