Bicyclists

As shown in Exhibit 5-17, at British roundabouts bicyclists fare worse in terms of crashes at roundabouts than at signalized intersections.

Exhibit 5-17. British crash rates (crashes per million trips) for bicyclists and motorcyclists at roundabouts and signalized intersections.

A French study (7) compared the crashes in 1988 in 15 towns in the west of France at both signalized intersections and roundabouts, as shown in Exhibit 5-18. The conclusions from the analysis were:

  • There were twice as many injury crashes per year at signalized intersections than at roundabouts;
  • Two-wheel vehicles were involved in injury crashes more often (+77 percent) at signalized intersections than on roundabouts;
  • People were more frequently killed and seriously injured per crash (+25 percent) on roundabouts than at signalized intersections;
  • Proportionally, two-wheel vehicle users were more often involved in crashes (16 percent) on roundabouts than at signalized intersections. Furthermore, the consequences of such crashes were more serious.
Exhibit 5-18. A comparison of crashes between signalized and roundabout intersections in 1998 in 15 French towns.

All European countries report that a more careful design is necessary to enhance bicyclists’ safety. The type of bicycle crashes depends on the bicycle facilities provided at the roundabout. If there are no bicycle facilities, or if there is a bike lane on the outer area of the circulatory roadway, crashes typically occur between entering cars and circulating bicyclists as well as between cars heading into an exit and circulating bicyclists. Improperly placed signs on the splitter island may also be a contributing factor.

As a result, most European countries have the following policies:

  • Avoid bike lanes on the outer edge of the circulatory roadway.
  • Allow bicyclists to mix with vehicle traffic without any separate facility in the circulatory roadway when traffic volumes are low, on single lane roundabouts operating at lower speeds (e.g., up to 8,000 vehicles per day in the Netherlands (4)).
  • Introduce separated bicycle facilities outside the circulatory roadway when vehicular and bicycle volumes are high. These separated bicycle facilities cross the exits and entries at least one car length from the edge of the circulatory roadway lane, adjacent to the pedestrian crossings. In some countries, bicyclists have priority over entering and exiting cars, especially in urban areas (e.g., Germany). Other countries prefer to give priority to car traffic showing a yield sign to bicyclists (e.g., Netherlands). The latter solution (i.e., separate bicycle facilities with vehicular traffic priority at the crossing points) is the standard solution for rural areas in most European countries.

Speed is a fundamental risk factor in the safety of bicyclists and pedestrians. Typical bicyclist speeds are in the range of 20 to 25 km/h (12 to 15 mph), and designs that constrain the speeds of vehicles to similar values will minimize the relative speeds and thereby improve safety. Design features that slow traffic such as tightening entry curvature and entry width, and radial alignment of the legs of a roundabout, such as with the urban compact design, are considered safe treatments for bicyclists (17).

In the Netherlands, a 90 percent decrease in injury crashes was experienced with separate bicycle paths around roundabouts where bicyclists do not have right-ofway at the crossings (17).

A bicycle crash prediction model from Sweden has been validated against data for Swedish, Danish, and Dutch roundabouts (18). The model provides reasonable results for roundabouts with up to 12,000 vehicles per day and 4,000 bicycles per day. The model tends to over-predict crashes (i.e., is conservative) for roundabouts carrying more than 12,000 vehicles per day that are also designed with separate bicycle paths with crossings on the approach legs. It is calibrated for crossroad intersections as well as roundabouts. To obtain the expected cycling crashes per year at roundabouts, the value derived from the general junction model is factored by 0.71, implying that bicycle crashes at roundabouts are 71 percent less frequent than at junctions in general. However, the reader is cautioned when extrapolating European bicycling experience to the U.S., as drivers in Europe are more accustomed to interacting with bicyclists.

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