Pedestrian–vehicular interactions in a mixed street environment

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Taylor and Francis Ltd.

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We develop a methodology to analyze pedestrian-vehicular interactions in urban streets in a mixed traffic environment, and then apply it to Bliss Street, an urban street in Beirut. Data on the street was collected before and after a crosswalk was installed using videography, radar speed guns, and manual counts. A pedestrian gap acceptance model indicated that installing the crosswalk did not have any significant effect on the pedestrians’ sensitivity to waiting time, gap size, or the speed of the approaching vehicles. However, it caused reductions in the speed of approaching vehicles which in turn encouraged pedestrians to accept shorter gaps. A micro-simulation model indicated that the crosswalk would reduce the speed on the street slightly, with significant reductions observed if more pedestrians who currently cross at midblock locations shift to use the crosswalk. The results of this study can be used to test interventions for enhancing pedestrian safety in Lebanon, and are generalizable to similar contexts in developing countries. © 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

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Crosswalk, Micro-simulation, Pedestrian gap-acceptance, Pedestrian safety, Pedestrian–vehicular interactions, Crosswalks, Developing countries, Video recording, Gap acceptance, Gap size, Lebanon, Microsimulation, Microsimulation models, Mixed traffic, Urban streets, Waiting-time

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