Slow Point Examples: Medians
Continued from…Reducing street area where motor traffic is given priority.
Slow Point Examples: Medians
Medians
Medians are islands located along the roadway centerline, separating opposing directions of traffic
movement. They can be either raised or flush with the level of the roadway surface. They can be expressed as painted pavement markings, raised concrete platforms, landscaped areas, or any of a variety of other design forms. Medians can provide special facilities to accommodate pedestrians and
bicyclists, especially at crossings of major roadways.
Design Considerations:
• Medians are most valuable on major, multi-lane roads that present safety problems for bicyclists
and pedestrians wishing to cross. The minimum central refuge width for safe use by those with
wheelchairs, bicycles, baby buggies, etc. is 1.6 meters (2 meters is desirable).
• Where medians are used as pedestrian and bicyclist refuges, internally illuminated bollards are suggested on the medians to facilitate quick and easy identification.
• Used in isolation, roadway medians do not have a significant impact in reducing vehicle speeds. For the purpose of slowing traffic, medians are generally used in conjunction with other devices, such as curb extensions or roadway lane narrowing.
Several caveats apply:
• To achieve meaningful speed reductions, the travel lane width reduction must be substantial and visually obvious. The slowing, however, is temporary; as soon as the roadway widens again, traffic resumes its normal speed.
• Bicyclists have been put at risk of being squeezed where insufficient room has been left between a central median and the adjacent curb. Experience shows that most drivers are unlikely to hold back in such instances to let bicyclists go through first. This threat is particularly serious on roads with high proportions of heavy vehicles.
• The contradiction between the need to reduce the roadway width sufficiently to lower motorist speeds, while at the same time leaving enough room for bicyclists to ride safely, must be addressed. This may be achieved by reducing the roadway width to the minimum necessary for a bicyclist and a motorist to pass safely (i.e., 3.5 meters).
There are three suggestions:
• Introducing color or texture changes to the road surface material around the refuge area reminds motorist that a speed reduction is intended.
• White striping gives a visual impression that vehicles are confined to a narrower roadway than that created by the physical obstruction — adjacent areas exist that vehicles can run over, but these are not generally apparent to approaching drivers.
• In some cases, provide an alternate, cut-through route for the bicyclists.