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Earth Transportation

Can We Fight Carbon Emissions With Roundabout Intersections? (seattletimes.com) 303

The U.S. city of Carmel, Indiana (population: 102,000) has 140 roundabouts, "with over a dozen still to come," reports the New York Times. (Alternate URL here.) "No American city has more. The main reason is safety; compared with regular intersections, roundabouts significantly reduce injuries and deaths.

"But there's also a climate benefit." Because modern roundabouts don't have red lights where cars sit and idle, they don't burn as much gasoline. While there are few studies, the former city engineer for Carmel, Mike McBride, estimates that each roundabout saves about 20,000 gallons of fuel annually, which means the cars of Carmel emit many fewer tons of planet-heating carbon emissions each year. And U.S. highway officials broadly agree that roundabouts reduce tailpipe emissions. They also don't need electricity, and, unlike stoplights, keep functioning after bad storms — a bonus in these meteorologically turbulent times.

"Modern roundabouts are the most sustainable and resilient intersections around," said Ken Sides, chairman of the roundabout committee at the Institute of Transportation Engineers...

A recent study of Carmel's roundabouts by the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety found that injury crashes were reduced by nearly half at 64 roundabouts in Carmel, and even more at the more elaborate, dogbone-shaped interchanges... [V]ehicular fatalities in Carmel, according to a city study, are strikingly low; the city logged 1.9 traffic deaths per 100,000 people in 2020. In Columbus, Indiana, an hour or so south, it was 20.8. (In 2019, the national average was 11.)

The Times points out other advantages — they can also be more friendly to pedestrians and cyclists, and alleviate rush-hour backups. But Carmel's former city engineer just argues it's an improvement over an older roadway system which "doesn't put a lot of faith in the driver to make choices.

"They're used to being told what to do at every turn."
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Can We Fight Carbon Emissions With Roundabout Intersections?

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  • by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:28AM (#62006703)
    Is the average driver doesn't know how to navigate them properly. They installed two circles in my town two years ago, and they still utterly confuse the average driver. Most people simply treat them as four-way stops, negating the original purpose anyhow.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Sounds like US drivers are on average dumb as shit if they cant work out roundabouts, they shouldnt have a licence.

      • by richy freeway ( 623503 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:45AM (#62006745)

        A friend of mine recently moved to the US. Over the years he had tried and failed to pass his driving test here in the UK. When he took his test over there, he passed first time.

        He commented that the driving test there is so easy it's dangerous.

        • The actual "driving" portion (ie. the part in a vehicle) is just navigating and parking around traffic cones in a parking lot.
        • by Escogido ( 884359 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @07:28AM (#62007005)

          at my driving test (around 10 years ago in CA), there was no parallel parking, no traffic cones, not even U-turns -- just 20 minutes of driving around, with a single stopping at the curb. to me the DMV's approach to driving appeared to be "we'll give out licenses to anyone who barely qualifies and then we'll take them back if they cause too much trouble on the road". given my following experience driving (main in the Silicon Valley area and the rest of CA), that approach may have been working out better for them than it looks on paper. and, there were very few roundabouts there though; most T-intersections in residential areas were 4-way stops, so I'm not surprised US drivers unused to roundabouts would treat them similarly.

        • US Driving Test (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @11:31AM (#62007479) Journal

          He commented that the driving test there is so easy it's dangerous.

          US driving tests are a joke. When I moved there years ago with my UK license they first made me take a theory test which the guy behind the desk thought I had cheated on because I got all the answers right even though I had just taken the test sitting in front of him.

          The driving part was a joke consisting of driving around one block in an automatic. The "hardest" thing was turning left back into the parking lot. In the UK examiners can cut the test short if you do something that causes you to fail and, since my test was so short I asked the examiner what I had done to fail it. She looked at me shocked and told me I had passed!

          The scary part though was that this was in Illinois and at the time there was a big scandal that the licensing agency had been accepting bribes to hand out licenses without tests!

      • by ukoda ( 537183 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @05:57AM (#62006861) Homepage
        Not really, they simply have no experience with them as they are so rare there. With it not being a mandatory part of their driving test they have no experience with them and are confused when they encounter their first one.

        The reverse of this is if like me you come a country with no 4 way stops and no road rules that rely on time of arrive the first time you encounter a 4 way stop it is a bit unnerving. You worry about what if you arrive at the same time as another car? So you try to adjust you speed so you can be sure you arrive at a different time to anyone else, yuk! I wonder how many accidents are simply conflicting claims about who was there first? With roundabouts you only have to worry about traffic from one direction whereas with a 4 way stop you have watch three directions at the same time.
        • Most countries have rules how to handle a 4 way intersection.
          I'm only aware about the US having the "stupid none rule" that the one has right of way who is there first.

          In most of Europe the car coming from the right (of you), has right of way. Regardless if any other one was "first".

          • If four cars are at the intersection, all four have a vehicle on their right, so none have the right-of-way.

            The American system of first-come-first-go makes more sense.

            • If four cars arrive at once, you can still do first-come first-go, and the rest will resolve itself by the yield rule.
              A roundabout, when driven correctly, is a first-come first-go without having to watch for traffic from multiple directions.
              • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

                If four cars arrive at once, you can still do first-come first-go, and the rest will resolve itself by the yield rule.

                Right. That's why first come, first go is a good rule.

                A roundabout, when driven correctly, is a first-come first-go without having to watch for traffic from multiple directions.

                Yeah, but you still have to look the other way for pedestrians or cyclists, who may be doing something stupid.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              That's now how roundabouts work. If they all arrive at the same time then they can safely enter the roundabout at the same time too.

          • by Malc ( 1751 )

            In most of Europe the car coming from the right (of you), has right of way. Regardless if any other one was "first".

            In Ireland, Malta and Cyprus, you give way to the right. i.e. to the traffic already on the roundabout or going from the right who will cross your path if you try to enter it. Surely most/all of the others give way to the left? Where do people on the roundabout give way to vehicles who want to enter it?

        • by jhecht ( 143058 )
          The biggest problem with any change in traffic rules anywhere usually is that it takes time for drivers to learn what they should do and learn it well enough to remember every time. Our city decided to change timing of a traffic signal at a busy intersection near my home to allow left turns several seconds after the WALK went on for a crosswalk on the street the cars were turning into. Weeks earlier they had posted a sign saying that the rules would be changed, without any details. Enough weeks passed that
          • by fgouget ( 925644 )

            Then the city started allowing left turns while pedestrians could still be in the crosswalk. The next day a driver hit a pedestrian who ended up in the hospital.

            Do drivers always assume they have the right to run over pedestrians in your country? Because in most countries, no matter what the signs or traffic lights say, if a pedestrian is on the road you must not run him over.

      • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @08:32AM (#62007095)

        Sounds like US drivers are on average dumb as shit if they cant work out roundabouts, they shouldnt have a licence.

        i can assure you, the average U.S. driver is dumb as shit, regardless of roundabouts.

      • Sounds like US drivers are on average dumb as shit if they cant work out roundabouts, they shouldnt have a licence.

        I live in a tourist town which, though rural, is all roundabouts. Many of the people who stop before entering one, despite the plain Yield signs, are visitors from roundabout-intensive European countries that sometimes mandate a stop before entering.

        The real problem is that at least in Arizona, roundabout drivers are not required to signal turns. So when you see approach a roundabout and there is traffic on the opposite side, you have to wait to make sure that person is not executing a left turn. This adds

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by arglebargle_xiv ( 2212710 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @08:49AM (#62007133)
        Another problem is that they gridlock over a certain occupancy level, I think 70 or 80%. Note how the cited data was from a small town, with presumably relatively low road occupancy? Once you get to whatever the gridlock percentage is, traffic simply stops. With red lights and intersections it still moves, even if it's slow.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Pentium100 ( 1240090 )

          Also, if the traffic coming into the roundabout is unbalanced, people can get stuck.

          Imagine a roundabout with 4 exits A,B,C,D. If there is a lot of traffic going from A to C, traffic going from B to D will just get stuck, unless there's traffic going from D to B.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by mobby_6kl ( 668092 )

          It doesn't really stop, at least not worse than any other type of intersection. What happens is that the roundabout gets packed and people use zipper merge to let everyone (slowly) join it as people get off.

          The only issue is if one exist is at a complete standstill, then that will prevent everyone from moving at all.

    • Most people simply treat them as four-way stops, negating the original purpose anyhow

      That sounds like they were designed wrong, perhaps because there wasn't enough space to build them properly. In a proper roundabout intersection, there's an island in the middle that prevents you from clearly seeing across the roundabout, and forces you to treat your entry into the roundabout as if you were merging into a road.

      Where I live, we have lots of these. We also have lots of drivers that don't know how to navigate

      • This. It's just a circular one-way road with yield signs on the entrances. It's not that hard to understand if you draw it large scale.

        It kind of breaks down when they try to build them into very small intersections though (I've seen them take small 4-way stops and then just plunk a concrete circle in the center of the intersection).

        • by smillie ( 30605 )
          A lot of the circles around here are so small that the semi trucks can't go around the circle without their trailers spending the whole time riding in the center block. For car drivers the decisions come too fast to make safe choices for someone not used to the flow of traffic. For me, I don't care if I bang up my car a little in these tight circles. I will just pull into traffic and hope. On the other hand my wife is a very cautious driver and finds these small circles frightening especially the 6 lane int
        • The small ones are great because tractor trailers try to use them because the GPS said it was faster and then they get stuck.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by SteelCamel ( 7612342 )

          The UK has mini-roundabouts. They're literally a painted white circle in the middle of the junction.
          Actually they work pretty much like a 4-way stop (or more like a 4-way yield, you don't have to stop if there's no other traffic), but traffic on your right (left in the US) has priority rather than whoever arrived first.

          And if you want confusing, look at the Magic Roundabouts. Roundabouts made of smaller roundabouts! Though they're not as confusing as they look.

    • by DrXym ( 126579 )
      Then you do some public information campaigns until they learn. Include questions & practicals on driving tests as well.
    • They're kind of great for intersections without a lot of traffic. In most cases you don't have to stop, where before you would have to stop.

    • And yet here in the UK and in fact in Europe we have absolutely no problem with them. It's not rocket science.
    • by alanw ( 1822 ) <alan@wylie.me.uk> on Sunday November 21, 2021 @07:33AM (#62007009) Homepage

      Confused? They would be. Obligatory links to the UK's (5 way) "Magic Roundabouts":
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      Is the average driver doesn't know how to navigate them properly.

      They put one of these in my home town a few years ago. It even had a pretty little fountain in the middle of it. I drove through it a year or so ago. You can still see the outline of the roundabout but the statue is gone an has been pounded flat. It's now a four way stop. I don't know what happened but I bet it involved a drunk redneck, a big ass truck, and 1 am.

  • No (Score:3, Interesting)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:28AM (#62006705)

    We cannot.

  • by RotateLeftByte ( 797477 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:29AM (#62006707)

    Here in the UK, the planners seem hell-bent upon making things worse at roundabouts. They are putting traffic lights in on many that very much don't need it. Many have the lights operational 24/7 but there are only queues at peak times. Will they put in peak-hour only lights? Is the Pope a Catholic?

    Enjoy your little bit of freedom. The planners in their quest to stop traffic at all costs will soon be along with the stop and don't go lights.

    • Enjoy your little bit of freedom. The planners in their quest to stop traffic at all costs will soon be along with the stop and don't go lights.

      We don't even need the planners to do that in some cases. There are areas where circles are actually objectively worse than lights. And they put them in anyway, because the stupid federal / state governments say they have to replace 4-ways with circles or they lose grant funding.

      Like in the city I was in from 2014-2017, they had a circle that was part of the entrance / exit system on a six lane highway, going to two roads, a four lane and a two lane service road ( with two lanes from the circle merging to a

    • Roundabouts only have limited capacity before they reach gridlock. I imagine that where they are putting in lights, traffic has risen to the level where they are necessary for at least part of the day.

  • by dargaud ( 518470 ) <slashdot2@@@gdargaud...net> on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:43AM (#62006741) Homepage
    Absolutely not.
    First, let me say that I think roundabouts are fine for cars and they've been in widespread use in my country for several decades.
    But consider the pedestrian who has to walk to the other side: you now have to walk around the entire thing and some are very large. No big deal but it can easily take an extra minute.
    Now for the cyclist, simply observe that many will prefer to take the pedestrian crossing instead of staying on the road even though they now have to stop instead of having the priority while on the inner part of the roundabout. Why is that ? Because it feels very unsafe to be on the outer diameter of the roundabout on a bike. The cars inside go fast and look towards the inside (not your direction). And the cars coming in barely look before inserting; many wouldn't even notice a bike. It's just scary.
    • by LKM ( 227954 )

      you now have to walk around the entire thing

      Usually, roundabouts have crosswalks on each exit, so I'm not sure why you're walking around the entire thing. Also, as a pedestrian, you now have the right of way, so instead of pushing a button and waiting for the right to turn green, you can just cross the street much more quickly.

      Now for the cyclist

      Your arguments are against roundabouts without bike lanes (which, fair enough). But then you should argue for bike lanes, not against roundabouts.

    • by ukoda ( 537183 )
      If I was a cyclist dealing with a roundabout with any traffic on it I would probably take to the footpath for my personal safety. Car drivers are very efficient at filtering out of their view anything smaller than a car.
    • So you do what we've done here in the UK/Europe. You either have cross walks near every entry with a central island or you build a tunnel underpass under the roundabout for pedestrians.
  • by Martin S. ( 98249 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:47AM (#62006747) Journal

    We have both in the UK, both roundabout and traffic lights. I have been driving for over three decades in the UK and abroad and Roundabouts are just better in every way.

    • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @04:56AM (#62006757)
      R/As are great for cars but are horrible for pedestrians and cyclists. Therefore they should work great in the USA.
    • But the road planners/engineers have to get them right.

      Roundabouts only work if the traffic flow is not so high as to cause some inputs to get locked out, because the ring is always full of traffic. This leads to some UK roundabouts having traffic lights put in so as to give everyone a chance. Then you're back in the "vehicles wasting fuel idling whilst they wait for the lights" situation.

      You can compromise by only having the lights active at the busier times.

      Also the mini-roundabouts can all too

  • For most new cars emissions at idle is already a solved problem. Obviously EVs will completely shut down the engine. Hybrids do that as well. But since last five years or so, regular gas engines will also shut down at idle.

    I remember seeing a study where they measure idling for more than 15 seconds is more expensive than an engine restart. So your Mazda will just shut down engine and restart when you hit gas.

    No need to install roundabouts, if this is your only concern.

    • I find this fascinating because it used to be the rule that most engine wear occurred when first starting the engine. I wonder when that changed?
      • by hawk ( 1151 )

        >it used to be the rule that most engine wear occurred when first starting the engine.

        that is from the metal-on-metal contact after the oil drained off the engine.

        Two factors for on./off engines:
        1) They aren't usually stopped long enough for the oil to largely drain off, and
        2) the increased use of synthetic and semi-synthetic oil: synthetic clings to the metal longer than natural oil.

        I know that my '02 Ford E150 required *proof* of not just scheduled oil changes, but semi-synthetic. I would suspect tha

  • by bb_matt ( 5705262 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @05:47AM (#62006845)

    The benefits over traffic lights are absolutely there, but there's downsides too - as there is for everything.
    One of the obvious ones is retrofitting roads and real estate.

    So, over here in the UK, we have some exceptionally large traffic islands and some incredibly complicated sets of them, that do keep the traffic flowing, but can be ... interesting to navigate.

    We also have some ridiculously small ones, due to the aforementioned "real estate" "retrofitting" issues.
    To all intents and purposes, these end up being more like stop signs at an intersection.

    There's a busy road intersection near where I live, where 4 roads converge at odd angles (yeah, this is classic Britain), that has two tiny traffic islands positioned right next to each other - and you have to work out all the give-way to right rules.
    What tends to happen, is people just randomly forge ahead, but somehow, it sort of works. No idea how.
    Folk often just ride right over the edges of the small ones, because, quite frankly, they are ridiculously small.

    There's some quite famous traffic circle (roundabout) intersections in the UK, that just boggle the brain the first time you navigate them.
    And this is where the design can go all sorts of wrong - just look up Swindons "Magic roundabout", an insane layout of 5 mini roundabouts in a circle.

    There's also the very real possibility of getting completely lost in some UK towns, due to the size of some of the roundabouts and the sheer volume of them. If you are not used to them, you are not only trying to navigate fast moving traffic converging into numerous circles, but also trying to figure out the road signs - sure, sat nav has changed this to a degree, but before sat nav, one town in particular that cooked my noggin' for a good few weeks, was Basingstoke.

    For those not used to these measures to keep traffic flowing, it can be really confusing and intimidating at first, depending on your outlook.
    If you are gung-ho and don't give a shit, hell, just blast into them full throttle.

    When they work in the way intended, this approach works - just a quick glance to the right, all clear, keep moving.

    • I never had any trouble navigating the large complex roundabout systems in the UK. There was a "magic roundabout" near where I went to uni and learnt to drive. They look hellishly complicated, but when you're actually going round them you're just following signs and applying the usual give way rules and don't really notice.

      I've since moved to New Zealand. People here aren't as good as the British at roundabouts and often indicate incorrectly. But they still help traffic flow better than traffic lights.
    • From your description, traffic works despite several of these types of roundabout. That's not an endorsement of them at all.

      Roundabouts are great where there's room and very little traffic flow, and you're not trying to manage traffic coming in and out of intersections at the same time. Otherwise they are senseless.

      Most of the time a simple 2-way stop at a 4-way intersection achieves essentially the same goal though, because usually one direction has a lot more traffic than the other.

      Here in the USA we keep

  • When I first traveled to the USA I was surprised by the lack of roundabouts as they are very efficient when used for the right type of intersections. Where they don't work is where the traffic flow is too heavy and attempts to scale them up makes them complicated and horrible to use. They are best in the intersections that in the USA would typically be a 4 way stop as the traffic can simply tweak their entry speed to give way to traffic already in the roundabout and everyone can flow through. The USA sty
  • When all cars passing these roundabouts are electric, when all energy used in the USA is green, we still have to reduce the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. This helps but it is not nearly enough

  • by remi2402 ( 816874 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @06:07AM (#62006875)

    The roundabout diagram in TFA is roughly what has been standard in Europe for the past 50 years (Nantes built the first "modern" roundabout in France in 1971, copying an earlier design from Britain. Can't remember how old the British design was). Now don't get me wrong, there are a lot of good things about roundabouts, namely car safety. They almost *eliminate* the risk of head-on collisions (the type you get on left turns). They transform massive crashes into fender-benders. That's a *massive* win.

    On the down side, they take a lot of real estate. Shouldn't be an issue in North American suburbia though. And the freeflowing nature only works up to a certain point, they're not silver bullets.

    The big downside is that the design in TFA is *terrible* for cyclists with lots of blind spots, and not enough traffic calming. Dutch designs favor pedestrians and cyclists (they have priority all over) by giving them enough room from car traffic to be visible. Other features *force* drivers to slow down more while still being freeflowing. Just google "dutch roundabouts", there are plenty of explanations and diagrams, videos on youtube, etc.

    The bit about emissions seems backwards to me: people MUST drive less if you want any meaningful impact (pick any of: shorter trips, fewer trips, bike/walk/transit to work/school) No roundabout will ever fix the environmental hell hole that car-centric suburbia is.

  • You fight carbon emissions by providing decent public transport and building cities such that people don't have far to commute and there are hubs by which they can travel without cars. You can also deter cars from entering cities at all by pedestrianizing sections, slapping them with congestion charges, prioritizing foot & cycle traffic and so on. In most US cities it is the exact opposite - mile upon mile of sprawl - strip malls etc all dependent on people having a car.

    I'm sure roundabouts, diverging

  • Spiral roundabouts seem to be the best way to go. They alleviate the need to change lanes while on the roundabout, which is useful since blind spots can be a big problem, at least when changing to a more outer lane.

    https://i.imgur.com/xnOFp8N.png [imgur.com]
    • can confirm.

      The A3 -M25 junction near London is a spiral. You have to try really hard to end up in the wrong lane if you enter it correctly.

  • So much depends on the specific intersection, and the amount of traffic. For intersections with small-to-moderate amounts of traffic, roundabouts are fine. Better than traffic lights or four-way stops, because there is very little waiting time and often no need to stop at all. Which is the point.

    For intersections with lots of traffic, a roundabout has to be a huge multi-lane affair, and those are just a mess.

  • You don't need studies, just ask the UK for the data. We've had roundabouts for decades.
  • by rantrantrant ( 4753443 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @07:12AM (#62006989)
    Question: Is the average UK driver more intelligent than the average US driver? Have you seen the complexity of some typical UK roundabouts that UK drivers navigate almost always without issues? Are US drivers incapable of learning the same? Loads of other countries have seen the benefits of roundabouts too. They make traffic light intersections look crude & primative by comparison.
  • https://traffic-simulation.de/roundabout.html

  • Regardless of the benefits of roundabouts, which are not universal (and must be integrated into a very complex and holistic road network design), the choice here to use fuel savings and reduced greenhouse gases is a poor one.

    The numbers quoted here for the reduction in annual fuel use are a fraction of a fraction of a percent of the yearly fuel use of vehicles.

    Roundabouts make sense in certain places. Sometimes, they are terrible, and sometimes they are so terrible that the roundabout itself has numerous st

  • by davide marney ( 231845 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @07:46AM (#62007027) Journal

    On holiday, I drove from Glasgow to London over a week, and had a chance to experience every type of roadway. As many have commented here, roundabouts are useless once traffic reaches a certain flow rate. More than once I experienced the monstrosity of an intersection of two primary roadways in the UK regulated by roundabouts: you take two roundabouts, place them side-by-side in an oval 3 lanes wide, and then add stoplights at every access point. I still wake up in a muck sweat over those.

    On a secondary road with irregular traffic, they're a nice solution. On a tertiary road with no traffic, they're an annoyance, totally unnecessary. If no one is ever going to be waiting for more than just a moment, just have the roads cross one another. Done and done.

    What really made driving nightmarish, however, is that there is apparently no off-street parking in the entire country. You come up to your typical village, and people have to cram their cars literally anywhere they can, even half-way out into the lane if they have to. It's Demolition Derby time, weaving in and out until you get through the town center.

    Even this would be acceptable if the roads themselves were wide enough for modern travel, but they're not. Aside from the excellent first tier highways, every road is too narrow by about 4-6 feet. The loss of even a few feet of clearance on the sides makes for an incredibly alarming driving experience. It's not an issue when you're driving down some country lane, of course one expects that to be narrow. No, it's driving through major traffic with mere inches of clearance at high speed. Still gives me the willies.

    Not to mention that it rains sometimes in the UK.

    Yeah, a pretty unforgettable experience. I was enormously relieved to not have to deal with this once I got home.

    • Clue stick: If the junction is controlled by traffic lights then it is not a roundabout.

      I've been driving in the UK for over thirty years and true roundabouts are brilliant for keeping the traffic flowing with competent drivers who can merge with confidence.

      • It's not a roundabout if it has traffic lights? I don't see how changing the name changes its fundamental design. The intersection is still round. You still have to keep your eyes on traffic entering and leaving the circle, only now you have the additional complexity of a traffic light to watch for.

        • It has has nothing to do with the name.

          If it has traffic lights it is not functioning as a roundabout, so it will not get the benefits of integrating the flow.

          The evidence, actually included in the article show that roundabouts actually function better.

    • Nah roundabouts are more effective, even traffic light controlled. You don't have to stop oncoming traffic entirely to cope with cars trying to cross, and head on collisions are almost impossible.

      But yes we have small roads which largely predate the car. If you think London to Glasgow is fun as a drive, yet heading, well, pretty much anywhere in/around/across the south circular in the afternoon. Especially Tooting Bloody Highstreet. Hours of boredom stopped in traffic interspersed with minutes of terror whe

      • Both systems are obviously crap, and one can only argue about which flavor of crap tastes worse here.

        Tiny roads not big enough for cars with cars on them are crap. So are gigantic roads with tons of super fast, super powerful cars with idiots behind the wheel.

        Frankly, the roads are the big problem, we can do better today

    • apparently no off-street parking in the entire country

      Yes, there is a lack of off-street parking, but we have these things called 'double yellow lines' on the side of the road that mark where you can stick you car in such towns. These tend to prioritise access based on how pretentious and outlandishly sized your vehicle is. They are usually in the most convenient locations - directly outside schools, busy shopping streets, hospitals etc. You can also just park on the pavement - folks here are very polite and pedestrians are happy to walk in the middle of a bus

    • Those villages were all built a long time before cars. It's not like you can just hoik the houses further apart in every single town and village in the country.

      I never really noticed the roads being narrow, I just thought they were very wide in other countries.

      Driving in the UK was fun: country roads, quite often with hilly sections, and because it's an old developed country there are so many alternative routes to every destination.
      • Agreed, I certainly enjoyed driving outside of town centers, the countryside is beautiful and so much fun to drive through. Every trip was a journey.

  • The reason that Carmel has so many roundabouts is Brainard, the city’s seven-term Republican mayor.

    If the story was instead about how he had boiled puppies for breakfast, that would be the lead /. pull quote, lol

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @10:32AM (#62007331)

    Red light cameras are a cash cow

  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @05:04PM (#62008181)

    One downside to roundabouts (at least from the point of view of city governments) is that you no longer get all that sweet sweet revenue from red light camera fines...

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @05:21PM (#62008235)

    Because modern roundabouts don't have red lights where cars sit and idle, they don't burn as much gasoline. While there are few studies, the former city engineer for Carmel, Mike McBride, estimates that each roundabout saves about 20,000 gallons of fuel annually,

    That's great for fuel cars. But what about electric cars, which all vehicles will be eventually?

    For electric cars there is no penalty for stopping... meanwhile the extra friction on tires created by going around a roundabout will mean tires will have to be replaced more often on electric cars then they would be on a straight intersection, thus emitting more CO2 over the long run.

  • by nukenerd ( 172703 ) on Sunday November 21, 2021 @07:03PM (#62008493)
    FTFA :

    Because modern roundabouts don't have red lights where cars sit and idle

    In the UK we have plenty of roundabouts with traffic lights, almost invariably where the roundabout is just off a motorway junction. They seem to be programmed to turn red as a car approaches, even if there is no other traffic around - I understand it is meant to be "calming" but it is actually infuriating.

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