Ever seen a STREET get a DUI?

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @MrVincentpadilla
    @MrVincentpadilla Год назад +151

    Is there any update on this?

    • @RoadGuyRob
      @RoadGuyRob  Год назад +141

      The former mayor let me know the project is all finished now. Haven't yet been back to Hollister to see it yet.

    • @Transitional
      @Transitional Год назад +17

      I also found this 1 year later news story which said it had been all fixed but some councilmembers and the current mayor want it rolled back to 4 lanes (ruclips.net/video/iG--u1gw_-Q/видео.html)

    • @TrinaMillenheft-us4pb
      @TrinaMillenheft-us4pb Год назад +1

      Lol

    • @gmenu8032
      @gmenu8032 Год назад +24

      ​@@Transitionalone step forward two steps back lol

    • @GearReview23
      @GearReview23 9 месяцев назад +9

      I just drove down the street today. The zig zags are still there but way more gradual and not really noteworthy or interesting as they were before. They also removed the bollards and from the wear on the white lines you can tell people just go straight and don't even really follow the curves.

  • @rsethc
    @rsethc Год назад +2487

    Huge respect to the mayor for not only having a cool idea but also about being open with talking about it so the public can understand what's going on.

    • @Elite3kampioen
      @Elite3kampioen Год назад +62

      And in a way that is not devencive. He explained it in a good way/

    • @THEJPR
      @THEJPR Год назад +79

      @Darkfarfetch It must be tiring to make up horrific scenarious in your head and live on them. I pity you, truly.

    • @constitutionalli7522
      @constitutionalli7522 Год назад

      The gangs have taken over though --if you look up the definition of a gang in Black's law dictionary? Find me one tiny little shred of definition that does not perfectly describe every Police department in America. Go on, I'll wait.

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Год назад +2

      @@darkfarfetch3664 you don't have crime in small cities like that. Everyone knows everyone else.
      And you can just go missing if you're an outsider.

    • @NewBuildmini
      @NewBuildmini Год назад +5

      ​@Darkfarfetch Your channel name reflects what you just said - far fetched.

  • @c.arandyl
    @c.arandyl Год назад +70

    The production value and direction of this video really makes it seem like a TV program! Absolute gold.

  • @GetOutsideYourself
    @GetOutsideYourself Год назад +2859

    I'm glad the mayor is not insane.

    • @xjing800
      @xjing800 Год назад +19

      Is that rlly better tho?

    • @danielalman9662
      @danielalman9662 Год назад +146

      wouldve been alot funnier if he was

    • @scottanno8861
      @scottanno8861 Год назад +44

      Sometimes you gotta get a little crazy to see some changes

    • @ph11p3540
      @ph11p3540 Год назад +1

      He's still a politician, therefore he's insane

    • @commandohazelnuts
      @commandohazelnuts Год назад +91

      honestly, he seems very likeable

  • @ZeBigLOL
    @ZeBigLOL Год назад +4

    this "street" is so wide that you could shrink it twice the size, increase the sidewalk, give a proper bicycle path, and maybe even add a business or two on the sides.

  • @LQC2556
    @LQC2556 Год назад +1733

    I think this will also work much better once the plastic barrier sticks are in place, because they make the roadway seem narrower (in a similar fashion to decorative trees or parked cars), which usually reduces drivers' speed.

    • @gameguild1555
      @gameguild1555 Год назад +85

      Planets, grass and trees can do the same and it looks better than just asphalt and paint

    • @TommyJonesProductions
      @TommyJonesProductions Год назад +30

      @@gameguild1555 - Those don't help bicycles, though.

    • @glx1987
      @glx1987 Год назад +50

      @@gameguild1555 Planting new trees ist difficult, because the roots can destroy the pipes and cables in the underground.

    • @gorak9000
      @gorak9000 Год назад +112

      @@gameguild1555 I'm pretty sure adding new planets would be pretty expensive - not to mention the shift in gravity it would create

    • @TheSnahsnah
      @TheSnahsnah Год назад +2

      @@TommyJonesProductions of course they do, in fact a median with grass and trees is better at protecting cyclists than these silly flex posts. Flex posts are only visual indicators, slightly better than lines. They are completely useless as actual barriers.

  • @ConditionOfMan
    @ConditionOfMan Год назад +1063

    It's so nice the Mayor took the time to shoot a video with you and explain the intent of the bungled stripe job.

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Год назад +20

      Well, he needed to cover his ass and explain why the effed-up street painting design wasn't his fault.

    • @microcolonel
      @microcolonel Год назад +78

      @@Milesco I mean... looks like the plan clearly showed a single chicane between the intersections, with smooth curved striping...

    • @bethisway
      @bethisway Год назад

      Bhaahahahha

    • @ddjohnson9717
      @ddjohnson9717 Год назад +17

      @@Milesco cover his ass on a

    • @wyomins
      @wyomins Год назад +3

      He has to, it's a part of his court ordered community service after his drug conviction...

  • @tysonplett3328
    @tysonplett3328 Год назад +18

    I am a big believer in using landscaping and physical features to tell the driver how fast to drive.
    There's one street in particular in my small city that is almost wide enough for 4 lanes (although it is marked for 2), then on the side there is 10 feet of grass, a sidewalk, and another 20 feet of grass before you reach the backyard fences of the neighbourhood. The speed limit is 50 km/h (30 mph) but it feels like I should be going 80.
    On another portion of the same street, it is split into 4 lanes, the sidewalks and houses are closer to the road, and there are trees planted on both sides and the median. The speed limit is the same 50 km/h, but there's never been any issues with speeding on that stretch.

  • @danteeightsix9069
    @danteeightsix9069 Год назад +128

    It's missing crosshatches or medians.
    It's typically the residents that speed through their own neighborhoods.
    That's why it's common to see speed humps even in neighborhoods that only have 1 entrance and exit.
    If they want people to slow down, they should place trees or objects to make the road look more narrow than it is to make drivers think they are driving faster than they are.

    • @Drewstir68
      @Drewstir68 Год назад +5

      yeah I feel like it's a losing battle given how big the road is already

    • @AndrooUK
      @AndrooUK Год назад +18

      Psychology backs that up.
      Some paint or a bollard artificially narrowing and slowing a street annoys drivers and makes them feel oppressed, but a proper kerb, trees or plants, or benches on them, and grass and stuff, and it feels natural to slow down and drive more carefully, even if they're only installed to do the same thing as paint and bollards.

    • @bored588
      @bored588 Год назад +2

      idk, ive seen people do 90 down back roads barely wider then the car, if cars can go faster then the speed limit people will do it.

    • @Quickstein
      @Quickstein Год назад +1

      Ok, but most people don't. Naturally some people are still gonna drive like idiots, but most people don't want to risk wrecking at high speeds.

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer Год назад +3

      I have no idea why the video didn't bring up the idea of median in the middle of the road, despite even depicting some sort of dual-median design at one point. The storm drains are a problem because they're on the outside of the road, and narrowing the road by removing those lanes will always be a problem. Removing the interior two lanes would be comparatively cheap.

  • @wootenbasset8631
    @wootenbasset8631 Год назад +12

    I would love to see even a short video showing this road fixed. (I watched the earlier video of this street also).

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech Год назад

      So would I, but that would depend on it getting fixed.

  • @rockit2017
    @rockit2017 Год назад +535

    I would love to see you do another report once the road design has been fixed! Great video!

    • @josephhoward4697
      @josephhoward4697 Год назад +20

      They’re fixing it. Scraped up the paint. I am saddened by the loss. It was a fun way to feel the steering in my car.

    • @egg-roll8968
      @egg-roll8968 Год назад +4

      @@josephhoward4697 If they screwed up that badly where I live, during the winter months those homes would have a lot of guest if they kept within the lines at even half the posted speed lol.

    • @josephhoward4697
      @josephhoward4697 Год назад +3

      @@egg-roll8968 Uninvited guests, I presume?

    • @Falcodrin
      @Falcodrin Год назад +1

      @@josephhoward4697 uninvited overweight and rude guests that seem to not be able to find the door

  • @StatusNull
    @StatusNull Год назад +2

    this entire channel is like a pbs show i could just binge everyday

  • @FelixMeister
    @FelixMeister Год назад +364

    Australian here.
    As soon as I saw the lines I thought I knew exactly what the intention was.
    We use many 'traffic calming' measures over here, but for slightly different reasons.
    Sometimes, it's similar and it's just to slow traffic down through a section.
    But often it's used as the coralley to induced demand. If there's a street being used by people to rat-race through a neighbourhood, they'll add these measures to make it less convenient and more annoying to use.
    That annoyance drives people to use arterial roads away from children etc.

    • @brodriguez11000
      @brodriguez11000 Год назад +5

      Explains some of the road designs I've seen in some video games. Wonder how autonomous vehicles will change road design?

    • @WynnofThule
      @WynnofThule Год назад +8

      @@brodriguez11000 Autonomous vehicles are probably being designed around similar logic to what humans already use, so I really doubt it'd change much.

    • @christianhumer3084
      @christianhumer3084 Год назад +1

      In a similar fashion. Going around curves means 1) lower speeds, 2) slghtly higher distance and 3) less comfort.
      Another thing to keep in mind is the fact that autonomous vehicles are going to be programmed to follow speed limits hopefully.

    • @Tazytots
      @Tazytots Год назад +3

      There are a lot of road/traffic safety designs that Europe and other countries use that I would absolutely love to see in the US. Particularly protected bike lanes.

    • @nathanpapp432
      @nathanpapp432 Год назад +6

      Except there is literally nothing to stop anybody from just driving straight down the road and ignore the lines. You'd have to be one hell of an npc to actually turn your steering wheel and follow the lines.

  • @ivechang6720
    @ivechang6720 Год назад +16

    This is a really good vid. Thanks for addressing important issues that people often take for granted if it benefits them or ignore if it's not something they themselves are suffering from.

  • @Arjay404
    @Arjay404 Год назад +281

    One of the biggest issues with this is that it's just lines. If it had actual obstacles like tree planters, curbs, parked cars, barriers and so on then it wouldn't be as weird, because then the drivers would only have the driving line visible to them and not all the other bits outside of the lane that confuses them. Then again the change in directions of the narrowing are also too close together and abrupt (for this road) so that doesn't help either.

    • @bigwatermelon4487
      @bigwatermelon4487 Год назад +24

      They’re going to fix it, so some of those things might be installed.

    • @sinthujankethes
      @sinthujankethes Год назад +26

      Exactly, paint is not infrasture, you see many of the drivers ignoring the paint and just drving striaght through it. I wish they exactly went about narrowing the street and putting physicals barriers between cycles and by doing so you couldc also widen the sidewalk. But they did mention the storm drain and other existing infrasture that would be costly to relocate. It sad this road is built this wide in first place to accomodate so much cars and leave scraps over for cyclists and pedestrians. I hope in implement a more effective road diet with physical traffic calming measures that protect vulnerable users

    • @Amanda-C.
      @Amanda-C. Год назад +30

      To be fair, they did mention that budget was a concern. Paint's better than nothing, and cheaper than trees. The little stick barriers will help some. As the area gets more lively and safe for pedestrians and cyclists, and property values start increasing, I think this mayor and his engineers will be supportive of more permanent solutions. The concept needs to prove itself, and the money needs to get there. One step at a time.

    • @olejniczak12
      @olejniczak12 Год назад +4

      Just pour larger sidewalks. Designate a portion of that for bikes. As a pedestrian, id rather be hit by a cyclist than a car. And as a cyclist, id rather not piss off the 2000lb walls moving towards me.
      The fact that cyclist and foot traffic cant share the sidewalk is the true apalling issue.
      Cyclist in my coty dont fallow road laws, and cops womt enforce them. The city is also narrowing roads and slowing traffic, for an almost non existant cyclist community. Its just causing drivers to get irritated, which leads to more accidents all around.

    • @PoulFrommPoland
      @PoulFrommPoland Год назад +7

      Ye, let's make it harder for emergency vehicles to pass traffic congestion

  • @AdamPriceOregon
    @AdamPriceOregon Год назад +4

    Nice report, Rob. I would love to see a collaboration between you and Not Just Bikes. many moments in this video I found myself thinking "What the Dutch would have done is....."

  • @davidfrischknecht8261
    @davidfrischknecht8261 Год назад +241

    I live in New Brunswick, NJ, and they recently finished a re-striping project on the street I live on. When I first moved in, the street had two lanes in each direction and people were flying down it. What they ended up doing was re-striping it to have one car lane in each direction, a turning lane between them, and a bike lane on each side of the road.

    • @PatricenotPatrick
      @PatricenotPatrick Год назад +12

      I used to stay in Elizabeth. But they did that to a street be me in Houston and Ngl, I definitely don’t go above 35 anymore 😂

    • @MissEldira
      @MissEldira Год назад +8

      The way it's suppose to be from the beginning :) Nice!

    • @williamerazo3921
      @williamerazo3921 Год назад +14

      It’s called a road diet. It’s suppose to make traffic go slower

    • @snoopyloopy
      @snoopyloopy Год назад +4

      Yes, classic road diet.

    • @thezenarcher
      @thezenarcher Год назад +2

      Livingston?

  • @TheCoyote808
    @TheCoyote808 Год назад +1

    I argued the point of continuing to allow street parking with our neighborhood board years ago. They said in a nutshell our condo complex had too many cars and made the property values and neighborhood of single family homes across the street seem "less desireable". Now they comolain about speeding and nightly street racing down the same street. But they don't want cars parked there, don't want to spring for remarking and putting up barriers for a bike lane. Even though biking through there is popular and dangerous now. Oh, and the cars parked on the main street that didn't see much traffic? Our condo comolex residents now just park on the side steets in the single family home neighborhoods to make a point. They don't want to eliminate street parking on their portion of the development, just ours.

  • @andybaer8
    @andybaer8 Год назад +512

    Love that you do roadway focused content while still being pro transit/bike lane

    • @Cykrypt
      @Cykrypt Год назад +58

      a well designed road is typically multi-modal
      what good is a road if it only offers convenience for one type of transport.

    • @Crayshack
      @Crayshack Год назад +18

      He's one of the few RUclipsrs I've seen on the topic who seems to believe you can actually design a road to serve all three at the same time. Most people like to argue for prioritizing one over the other, but he presents a balanced take where the goal is getting everyone using the road safely.

    • @lukasg4807
      @lukasg4807 Год назад +4

      @Moon Shine out of curiosity what do you want bike lanes for? Bikes seem impractical for transportation since you show up at your destination sweaty and gross, and for recreational purposes bike trails seem far safer as well as prettier.

    • @gio160
      @gio160 Год назад +11

      @@lukasg4807 not rlly unless you live in like nevada

    • @lukasg4807
      @lukasg4807 Год назад +4

      @@gio160 well he said moving from Phoenix to Dallas, both of those places are hot af 90% of the year

  • @bradleybruvva3021
    @bradleybruvva3021 Год назад +2

    Speed limits are getting too damn slow, they’re are apparently lowering them to 20mph in my neighborhoods.

  • @timeimp
    @timeimp Год назад +231

    Rob, you delivered again! And it was so cool to see you got the actual Mayor of Hollister involved!
    What would be really interesting would be to cover those mid section (between yellow) with t-based median strips to reduce heat and make it safer for pedestrians.

    • @Jetliner
      @Jetliner Год назад +8

      That's what I was thinking, paint can only go so far

    • @jfwfreo
      @jfwfreo Год назад +8

      Throw a few trees (in pots) in these spots. Adds some shade and avoids drivers choosing to ignore the lines. And they don't have to be expensive either (unlike medians or the like)

  • @Dodge0359A
    @Dodge0359A Год назад +2

    The solution to this whole problem is simple, though costly.
    Address it in the same manner as trains vs cars.
    Remove the pedestrian vs vehicle interaction by burying the crosswalks under the roadway via tunnels or over the roadway via pedestrian bridges.
    There's no other way to facilitate the safe travel of pedestrians in this day and age.

    • @SeaLeg
      @SeaLeg Год назад

      There are plenty of ways for pedestrians to cross safely that are illustrated in other videos on his channel. Nothing is black and white.

  • @Br3ttM
    @Br3ttM Год назад +12

    As someone from a place that has snow on the ground several months of the year, and plenty of roads that need to be repainted, I don't like any road where I can't tell about where the lanes are without paint. Even without those issues, it sometimes still takes too much focus to figure out what the intent of the paint is, which makes you look at the paint more than the other cars and pedestrians. Hopefully they put enough structure around the road that their planned fix feels natural to the drivers.

    • @Jester-uh9xg
      @Jester-uh9xg 9 месяцев назад +2

      Snow is not an issue in the desert, lol

  • @zdog90210
    @zdog90210 Год назад +2

    Honestly if I saw a road like this I would drive as fast as I could just to hear my tires squeal with each turn back and forth it would be a lot of fun. Not safe but funaf

  • @dragonskunkstudio7582
    @dragonskunkstudio7582 Год назад +33

    10:23 That ambulance animation was top notch.

    • @AlphabetSoupABC
      @AlphabetSoupABC Год назад +21

      I recognize that ambulance. That's BeamNG Drive!

    • @Dom-Perignon
      @Dom-Perignon Год назад +2

      @@AlphabetSoupABCI saw that and went to the comments haha

    • @RSAgility
      @RSAgility Год назад

      Oof!

    • @LoganHellcat2024
      @LoganHellcat2024 Год назад

      10:24 beamng drive games ambulance players 😂😂😂

  • @PythonPlusPlus
    @PythonPlusPlus Год назад +1

    in the UK this problem has been solved using a kind of barrier that is spaced at regular intervals. The barriers are just gates made by bringing the curb in suddenly and adding an island between the 2 lanes to create a very tight space to drive through. This way drivers have to approach it very slowly to avoid a collision. But you don’t have to do any complex manoeuvres and you can still pass through it comfortably at around 20mph

  • @STOCathain
    @STOCathain Год назад +39

    I started watching your videos out of curiosity for street design and urban planning but am sticking around thanks to your friendly demeanor! Always a joy to watch.

  • @Delimon007
    @Delimon007 Год назад +1

    3:02
    And children should not be running out in the street. If they are not raised properly, this is called the darwin award. The easiest way to fix that issue is to put a crossing light there to allow pedestrians to cross. Hard concept to understand I know.

  • @sferg9582
    @sferg9582 Год назад +11

    LOL! at the 11:40 mark, I wonder what passersby were thinking as they saw you playing with trucks and chalk with a safety vest on.

  • @JadeMythriil
    @JadeMythriil Год назад +4

    I just found this channel and the editting is amazing. It's like something I'd watch on Discovery.

  • @TrickiVicBB71
    @TrickiVicBB71 Год назад +109

    I had been excitedly waiting for this vehicle. The original design the mayor wanted makes a lot of sense

    • @snoopyloopy
      @snoopyloopy Год назад +4

      Honestly, the "botched" design will be far more effective at slowing down traffic if they put up delineators.

    • @zebragoboom
      @zebragoboom Год назад +5

      @@snoopyloopy I'm not sure they're trying to go for the absolute most effective way at reducing speed, they just want to reduce the speed to a certain amount

    • @jimskywaker4345
      @jimskywaker4345 Год назад +1

      @@snoopyloopy because no one would drive on it

  • @nathang4682
    @nathang4682 Год назад +67

    Great video as always Rob, I hope people recognize how rare it is that a youtuber puts this much effort in to make their channel both highly entertaining and informative. Going on site to so many places and getting irl interviews with the people involved in the projects is amazing. Keep it up!!

    • @simonsaysno
      @simonsaysno Год назад

      This channel is criminally underrated

    • @Ferrichrome
      @Ferrichrome Год назад

      That’s what I thought too. Nobody can make videos on road design that are this entertaining. Except Not Just Bikes lol

  • @xoso599
    @xoso599 Год назад +1

    I love how the plan to slow down traffic is to put in a traffic circle, while go to any anti car VT channel and all you hear is a how they are faster.
    Just narrow the road with barriers, expand them out at crossings to have turning lanes and advances then neck down to an uncomfortably narrow road. Maybe throw in a few of the super improved pedestrian crossing lights.
    Nope paint stupid lines all over and leave the people to race down the road drifting at 60mph or just ignore them and drive straight and safe-ish.

  • @EnjoyFirefighting
    @EnjoyFirefighting Год назад +70

    Would be more effective if they used raised medians and curbsides with e.g. plants and actually slowed down traffic by the way they are arranged; Might sometimes be a bit annoying, but it helps. They can be set up to slow down car traffic and still handle the size of full-size trucks
    Just look at the width of that road, it's ridiculous!

    • @miljkovicsrb
      @miljkovicsrb Год назад +1

      Hey 👋

    • @Arjay404
      @Arjay404 Год назад +10

      Exactly, it's really the giant open which is simply marked with lines that causes the problem. If it has curbs and planters the lines wouldn't be visible so there wouldn't be anything to confuse the drivers.

    • @CRneu
      @CRneu Год назад +11

      money seems to be the main driving factor behind the lack of these features.

    • @sinthujankethes
      @sinthujankethes Год назад +5

      That road is ridiculously wide and they can definitely can narrow it too add protected cycling infrasture, street trees and planting strip. It's insane that they build this road wide in a neighbourhood and near a school and wonder why they have a speeding problem.
      That design of road further enforces the perception that cities have lets roads be more forgiving and proctecting car drivers at the expense of being a hostile environment for pedestrians and cyclists

    • @EugeneAyindolmah
      @EugeneAyindolmah Год назад

      California city "planning"

  • @stevenroshni1228
    @stevenroshni1228 8 месяцев назад +2

    I love how quick you were telling people you don;t work for the city

  • @Ice_Karma
    @Ice_Karma Год назад +26

    I find myself wondering if the contractor "messed up" this job on purpose, to make either the city or the idea itself look stupid, even knowing the city would probably make them re-do it.

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Год назад +13

      Obviously. Nobody accidentally does this.

    • @lobsters12111
      @lobsters12111 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah they love costing themselves time, money, reputation, and valuable city contracts. Take that, government!

  • @empirestate8791
    @empirestate8791 Год назад +2

    They should actually use a median with trees and plants, or at least some bollards. That will definitely calm traffic while also making the road a lot more pleasant!

  • @HenryMidfields
    @HenryMidfields Год назад +20

    One burning question, Rob. Could they not simply rip out the section of the road in the center and make that into a median with trees and shrubs planted? I think that would have both beautified the road, created extra green space, and achieve the intended traffic calming.

    • @Daniel-cw8lg
      @Daniel-cw8lg Год назад +15

      That costs a lot more than paint

    • @GearReview23
      @GearReview23 Год назад +4

      Hollister doesn't have that type of money. It would definitely be the preferred solution.

    • @williamerazo3921
      @williamerazo3921 Год назад

      Would have cost millions.

    • @Pystro
      @Pystro Год назад +2

      It would be cheaper than going to the intended long term solution of 2 immediately adjacent lanes (because the curb, drains and all the asphalt that you want to retain for your traffic calmed configuration would remain in place).
      But it would also mean that once you are ready to re-build it into the best configuration, (which has the advantage of leaving plenty of space for buffers to the cycle lanes, wide sidewalks, and whatever else they'd want to put onto the street), you'd have to re-add the asphalt of those center lanes, making that step more expensive.
      I do however think that just putting some planters on that dead space between the double yellow lines (instead of turning it into a full-on median) could be a good way to beautify the street and make it visually narrower.

    • @JohnJohn-ss5vj
      @JohnJohn-ss5vj Год назад +1

      Are you going to pay for it?

  • @jlco
    @jlco Год назад +1

    "Just lowering the limit doesn't do anything"
    Tell that to VDOT. Doesn't stop them from lowering actual freeways to 55 mph.
    Around here, they'd also shove a bunch of 5mph speed bumps all over a 25mph road like this and call it a day... though, they probably wouldn't have to, since _every single intersection_ on it would be a stoplight for literally no reason.
    Seriously, those things can't be cheap. Spend some money on lane retroreflectors or paint that's still visible in the rain for literally a _single_ road in the entire city, why don'tcha? I can't tell road lines from tire tracks if someone sneezes on the road at night.

  • @baksatibi
    @baksatibi Год назад +15

    My home town renovated the main street a few years ago. It used to be an almost straight 2 lane street with no traffic lights or any other features to force drivers to slow down. It's not too wide and has parking spaces along the sides but I don't remember drivers driving under the speed limit, which is 50 km/h (31 mph). They added traffic islands to some of the pedestrian crossings that doubles as traffic calming devices and it works surprisingly well. The speed limit hasn't changed but drivers now often drive at 40 km/h (25 mph) or even slower.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser Год назад +3

      See, around here I'm fairly sure they'd consider that a hazard... and so change the speed limit signs accordingly. Because the claim that people pay no attention to speed limit signs isn't actually quite correct. The thing is though, 'driving to the conditions' includes 'not driving at a substantually different speed form the other vehicles around you' if you don't want to cause significant accidents. So all it takes is for Enough people to regularly ignore the speed limit signs and then no one else can safely follow them. In places where the culture is to stick to the speed limit? Basically everyone sticks to the speed limit!
      This only changes on roads with very light traffic. And even then, if the signs are sufficiently prominant, and standardized, people will generally stay fairly Close to the limit.

    • @baksatibi
      @baksatibi Год назад

      @@laurencefraser I didn't mention but you can still easily drive at the speed limit, it's not dangerous to drive around the traffic islands at normal speed. I personally find it a bit annoying to be stuck behind someone going slower, but I wouldn't consider it a hazard until that car doesn't change speed erratically.

    • @James-vj5hz
      @James-vj5hz Год назад +1

      I love traffic calming. It makes the sidewalks much better to walk along. I prefer shared streets though.

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer Год назад

      @@baksatibi It's a hazard to _be_ the car going much slower than everyone else, since it means someone might rush up behind you.

  • @MrTearyOne
    @MrTearyOne 10 месяцев назад

    God imagine having to do a driver's exam along this road. "Ok now we start the real test! Cross the stripe and you fail! Go under the speed limit and you also fail! Go!"

  • @n0mad385
    @n0mad385 Год назад +17

    So glad I discovered this channel. Such fantastic styling in the editing and the humor is so dang funny!

  • @floydoroid
    @floydoroid Год назад +1

    the thing about these solutions is that they rely on drivers to adjust accordingly to the road conditions. Given that chicanes (which, as stated, originate from racing) are going to be used, the potential carnage that could result from various different kinds of collisions is frightening to me, compared to a straight road. Chicanes are normally meant to have only one direction of traffic, so in order for CEs to remove the possibility of head-on collisions, there needs to be a crash barrier in the median. Otherwise, I'd be terrified of an oncoming collision

  • @evaangelofdeath
    @evaangelofdeath Год назад +6

    Not a fan of traffic calming circles at least how they are implemented in my county. Should just be roundabouts. Interesting hearing the issues of speed bumps. My city installed a bunch of tall raised crosswalks on multi-lane high traffic roads with no other forms of traffic calming or addition of lighting and signaling. Said roads happen to also fan out from the local hospital. The speed limits remain unchanged while traffic usually cuts 15-20 MPH to go over the bumps to just zoom right back up.

  • @barackobama9815
    @barackobama9815 Год назад +1

    This specific neighborhood road near me had its residents complaining to the city that people were going too fast on it so they painted sharp turning zig zag lines to try to slow people down. They ended up removing that pretty quick and just replacing it with speed bumps.

  • @zsoltturi6989
    @zsoltturi6989 Год назад +17

    They should put there mobile trees in containers. So it would be more green, more obsticles and it can be removed if there is no success.
    Also a good thing i have just introduced to: the traffic light which is green by default, but turns red if someone is speeding.

    • @NewBuildmini
      @NewBuildmini Год назад

      The traffic light would have to be in a sensible location (e.g at a crosswalk or intersection), otherwise it would look strange and people could just ignore it. A red light camera should also be installed.

  • @ph11p3540
    @ph11p3540 4 месяца назад

    We had a similar road running through our neighborhood and speed traps failed to fix the speeding problem. One day after one to many fatal incidents, the city decided to add traffic calming measures from landscaped choke points, and speed warning signs that flashed to driver how fast they are travelling and warn them when they are speeding. The choke points was enough to halve half the traffic. Allowing cars to park along the size caused a psychological effect on driver to slow down. The fixes to this road were very cheap and well thought out.

  • @matthiasknutzen6061
    @matthiasknutzen6061 Год назад +8

    Not just bikes would have a stroke

  • @_SYDGAMING_
    @_SYDGAMING_ Год назад +5

    The mayor actually seems like a sound dude to chill with and get a good laugh off lol

  • @TroyBrophy
    @TroyBrophy Год назад +5

    Driving in Japan requires your complete attention because the roads tend to be narrow, even suddenly bottlenecking to the point where cars have to stop to allow oncoming traffic through. There are few straight roads with sidewalks. I've often thought that it's too easy to switch your brain off while driving in the US. It's too controlled and predictable, so people aren't focused, and that leads to speeding and distracted driving. This seems like an interesting way to get people to pay more attention to the road.

    • @NewBuildmini
      @NewBuildmini Год назад +1

      Rural Britain is also like that.

  • @masterxDh20
    @masterxDh20 Год назад +6

    i like how the mayor explain his thinking out to us. Much appreciated.

  • @leafbelly
    @leafbelly Год назад +7

    Great video! It's so refreshing to see an infrastructure RUclips channel that isn't overly preachy and binary: cars bad; trains good. And despite some groups that think cars shouldn't exist and that everyone should just hop on a train or walk, the reality in the vastness of the U.S. is that cars are pretty much a necessity, and it can be a good thing if done well -- as your channel tries to illustrate. Keep it up!

    • @traviskraemer
      @traviskraemer Год назад

      The problem is largely sprawl in our city development not the spacing between cities. Large distances between cities is more an argument for airplanes and high speed trains, not for slower cars. The goal isn't to eliminate cars, it's to provide another option for people where transit is possible to reduce congestion and improve travel times for everyone.

    • @AlphabetSoupABC
      @AlphabetSoupABC Год назад +3

      I've stopped watching most infrastructure, transit, and urban planning channels for this exact reason. A lot of the more popular channels don't even seem to have a technical understanding of what they're talking about. They just repeat "Stroads bad" and "Replace it with a train" endlessly. It's all very dogmatic. I'm all for more and better transit, but it's not the answer to everything.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser Год назад +1

      the cars are a necessity in the USA almost entirely because your governement keeps spending much more than rail would cost on ever more counterproductive roads and highways (that they don't even maintain properly) rather than building the proper rail and pedestrian infrastructure that would render most of them unnecessary. Yes, you still need roads, but when you're not trying to make them do everything else's job, badly, at much higher cost when you don't ignore half the numbers (roads are subsidized a Lot, drivers pay more for their cars purchase, upkeep, and fuel than they would in ticket prices (and also more than the transit company would have to pay per rider for Their vehicles even if they don't cheat somehow), and so on and so forth), you need a lot less of them, at a lot smaller scale, that are a lot safer and more pleasant to use...
      Basically, properly built and run public transit makes Roads better too.
      Yes, yes, cars are still needed in specific use cases, it's rarely practical to properly serve farms via passenger rail, you still need last mile delivery vans, and so on.
      Doesn't change the fact that they are massively over used and in many places (especially in the USA) the infrastructure needed to support them is well and truely excessive.
      Oh, and people say 'replace it with a train' endlessly because, well, each mode of transit has situations where it works very well and situations it's not so good at... and the USA Keeps Building Roads for situations where road vehicles are Shit and they should be using Rail! Much like you don't build high-speed rail where a local tram is all that is needed, and don't try to use a VW bug for jobs that require one of those mega mining trucks, and don't take a passenger ferry from New York to California, there are situatons where rail is ideal and personal road vehicles and/or trucks are just DUMB. Pretty much Anywhere you get gridlocked highways? It's because the vast majority of that traffic SHOULD have been going by rail.

    • @Derkiboi
      @Derkiboi Год назад

      The USSR dominated rail transport for both passenger and freight. It is indeed possible

  • @JCurry1123
    @JCurry1123 Год назад +1

    Crazy how much thought goes into things everyone uses everyday. Never thought of a road system as more than just a line you lay down to get you from a to b.

  • @mfaizsyahmi
    @mfaizsyahmi Год назад +6

    Put businesses on the edges of the reserves. that'll increase traffic, and increased traffic slows them down. pop-up shops would do.
    Also, put a green median for the sake of everything that's holy, as I can feel the radiant heat coming off the pavement as I sit and watch this video!

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Год назад +2

      Yeah, just form a bunch of businesses. lol

    • @staciecarrel4492
      @staciecarrel4492 Год назад

      Businesses don’t slow things down as much as you would hope. I live near a few streets like this but lined with commercial property and large apartment complexes, so lots of traffic, they also have lots of street lights. The speed limit is 35 but if you go with the flow of traffic you’re easily still going 50 mph or even more. If the cops pulled over speeders they’d literally have to pull over nearly every car driving on the road.

  • @asfdssad
    @asfdssad Год назад

    I'm from this town, and my dad was a politician here, i will say this Ignacio is a great mayor, the city coucil does not like change, and they gave them self's pay increase, but refuse to make changes for the people, It's sad he lost his race, but his solar company was giving great deals to the city, way cheaper than other solar comp's, this road was fun to drive the first day.

  • @PatricenotPatrick
    @PatricenotPatrick Год назад +18

    We have a street by me people easily would go 50 on, it’s wide and there’s no light for a mile. They made it 1 lane each way, added bike lanes, and lots of trees in the middle. Going over 35 on it feels way too fast now. I actually like it 🤔

    • @Snowshowslow
      @Snowshowslow Год назад +3

      Yeah that's great :) With the added benefits of making cycling an option (less traffic, more exercise) and lessening the heat island effect and air pollution with the trees.

    • @PatricenotPatrick
      @PatricenotPatrick Год назад

      @@Snowshowslow I mean… it’s hot here half the year so idk about biking to work. But it’s fun for weekend rides lol

    • @Snowshowslow
      @Snowshowslow Год назад

      @@PatricenotPatrick Where do you live? :)

  • @craigsawyer6453
    @craigsawyer6453 Год назад +1

    Why doesn't someone make some "indestructible" (perhaps plastic) trees/bushes that could line the road - separate the bicycles from the cars - but emergency vehicles could drive over if needed. Oh, and if a family car hit one it would just fold over. This would give the perception of speed and cost less than ripping up the street. The heights and sizes could be varied to look natural and smaller ones could be used in high wind areas.

  • @bigflamarang
    @bigflamarang Год назад +47

    Hey Rob, love your videos, recently the engineers here in Madison Wisconsin redesigned the Beltline (a major highway that goes through the city and has major problems with congestion) so that people can use the shoulder during peak traffic - they call them 'Flex lanes'. Wtf were they thinking??? Isn't it only a matter of time before the increased capacity gets eaten up and the highway is all congested again, except this time even the SHOULDER is congested??? And what are they going to do if emergency vehicles need to get by? What If a motorist needs to pull over? I feel like the traffic engineer who designed this must have an extra chromosome, and I'd love to hear your thoughts on it.

    • @Aveplav123
      @Aveplav123 Год назад +1

      We have this in the Netherlands as well. Often the shoulder lane is less wide so it requires everyone to drive slower. 2 lanes means 130km/h, 3 lanes means 100/120km/h. General speed was reduced to 100km/h 2 years ago so that effect has gone away. I suppose it allows for a temporary increase in capacity without having to redo the entire line but I don't know if it is considered a succes here.

    • @traviskraemer
      @traviskraemer Год назад +9

      $45 million spent on it for a 10 mile stretch. There sure seems to be a lot of money for highway expansions. We need to stop trying to "improve" highways and instead focus that money on improving public transit. A few buses at peak traffic times can take just as much traffic off the highway as a flex lane can add capacity, but with the added benefit of reducing cars on other streets as well. Unfortunately highways are decided by the state so it doesn't matter what impacted cities think.

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma Год назад +4

      I'm pretty sure that the phenomenon of "induced demand" all but guarantees that the "flex" lanes will eventually become permanent lanes.

    • @CRneu
      @CRneu Год назад +4

      it's incredible that city planners still dont understand induced demand. if you build it they will clog it. that money could have been better spent on public transit.

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma Год назад +3

      @@CRneu I think the city planners understand induced demand quite well, but they're not the ones making the decisions about what to build...

  • @YungSteambuns
    @YungSteambuns Год назад +1

    So you're telling me, because of all the speeders, they're going to lose a 4 lane road into a 2 lane road
    Damn I'd hate to live with that

  • @travcollier
    @travcollier Год назад +13

    Love the demo with sidewalk chalk, Legos, and toy cars. Real quality... And a clever way to get folks to think about the reason for traffic calming ;)

    • @bikeny
      @bikeny Год назад

      And we also got a little history lesson.

  • @SirLANsalot
    @SirLANsalot Год назад +1

    the idea behind widening the road beforehand is something called FUTRUE PROOFING your design. Do not EVER make the road "good enough" for what you need now, always make it for traffic that isn't there yet but might/will be there in 10 or 20 years. Its much easier to restripe a "too wide" road then it is to go back and widen it AFTER everything has already grown up to the old size. So many cities have this issue, where the roads were "good enough" at the time and today, after 20 years of growth, you have gridlock.
    For example, if Portland Oregon had actually built the 7 freeways they had planned back in the 50's and 60's, they wouldn't be having the traffic issues they have today. Seattle, Washington, in all its wisdom BUIT A CONVENTION CENTER ABOVE I-5, forever making that part of the freeway 6 lanes (its 8 lanes on either side of that area too).

  • @stevengordon3271
    @stevengordon3271 Год назад +6

    Having the curves on each side of the road converge invites head-on collisions. The curves on each side should compliment each other instead of mirroring each other. A concrete median would also help.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Год назад +3

      That is the idea behind it. The perceived danger of head-on collisions with oncoming traffic is one of the best psychological triggers to slow people down.
      Remember that our danger sense is not as intelligent as we are. It basically thinks we are running down the street, so it will not see a real danger in e.g. running into pedestrians crossing our path. But running head-on into a solid object, that's always dangerous.

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer Год назад +1

      @@HenryLoenwind All well and good until the perception becomes real. I'd really rather not go down a street playing little games of chicken every hundred yards.

  • @jonesgang
    @jonesgang Год назад +1

    If this had happened in any other state I would be concerned, but seeing how this happened in wonderful California. It is just par for the course. Surfs UP!! Dude!!

  • @magiliangaming
    @magiliangaming Год назад +7

    since i started watching your channel, around a year or so ago, now. I really think about the planning that went into a lot of roads that i drive on and that it really isnt as simple as ''need road, build road''. theres a lot more that goes into it.

  • @clapped_6367
    @clapped_6367 8 месяцев назад

    I assumed this was to get people to slow down. The mayor seems like a cool guy who just wants to try things to help keep the road safe. He even seems excited about it and willing to keep trying until something actually useful works

  • @Josh_Fredman
    @Josh_Fredman Год назад +4

    I love the little flourishes of humor you add, like the Hollister's fun fact or the pronunciation of fancy French terms.
    If it were me, I would've gone for a tree-lined median, but I suppose that's a bit pricier than stripes and traffic circles.

  • @SnippetSphere_1
    @SnippetSphere_1 Год назад +1

    I'm willing to bet that making the lanes curve slightly so that they kiss in the middle of the road would fail to cause anyone to slow down and likely cause more accidents.

  • @worldpeace6322
    @worldpeace6322 Год назад

    I'd ignore the zigzag and drive as fast as I can there just to infuriate the mayor who made this decision 😂😂😂

  • @drdrago12
    @drdrago12 Год назад +27

    love every one of your videos! I started my CE degree this year & you've been a big inspiration (:

    • @StaYUTI420
      @StaYUTI420 Год назад +2

      I just wanna say in advanced, I appreciate you making my commute longer, I don't like showing up to work on time, to make money and I really hate going home to my wife and kids. So please introduce tons of traffic calming and anything to make my commute slower. I'd appreciate it!

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Год назад +2

      @@StaYUTI420 Agree -- this "traffic calming" fad should be called what it really is: "traffic congesting". Or at least, "artificial traffic slowing". This obsession with slowing down traffic is annoying. As long as drivers are driving safely and paying attention, it doesn't matter how fast they're going (within reason). Cars and roads exist in order to get people from A to B in a reasonably quick, efficient manner. The car-hating zealots want to destroy that. 😠

    • @cocobailey777
      @cocobailey777 Год назад +1

      @@Milesco “as long as drivers are driving safely”
      Yeah tell that to the millions of people a year who get hit by drivers speeding down quiet neighbourhood streets. No one’s putting traffic calming on big arterial streets, and if your commute consists entirely of narrow local neighbourhood streets then that’s a you problem. You simply cannot trust everyone to use a 2 ton death machine responsibly and safely by twiddling your fingers and asking “but.. but would you PWEASE consider slowing down?” That’s the entire point of this video. Using the power of infrastructure so drivers HAVE to slow down in places they need to be.
      Roads do not exist only for cars. They exist for people walking, biking, taking the bus, etc too. Designing your street for only one mode of transportation is kind of a crappy way to design something.

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Год назад +1

      ​@@cocobailey777 You're missing the point. Speed, by itself, isn't dangerous (within reason). It's _collisions_ that are dangerous, and speed doesn't cause collisions (except at the extremes). German autobahns have no speed limits at all, yet because of high quality, well trained, disciplined drivers, they are safe.
      The problem isn't speed, it's incompetent drivers who are unable to control their cars or don't pay attention. Focus your energies on suspending or revoking the licenses of _those_ people -- the truly incompetent -- and we'll have safe streets, while still allowing competent drivers to proceed to their destinations at a reasonable velocity and not at a granny's pace.
      _"Roads do not exist only for cars. "_
      Yeah, they do.
      _"They exist for people walking...."_
      No, that's what sidewalks are for.
      _"...taking the bus..."_
      That's functionally the same as cars (motor vehicles)
      _"...biking..."_
      Okay, that one's a legitimate concern, but again, the problem is incompetent motorists not keeping their eyes (and brains) open and *paying attention.* The cause of motor vehicle-bicycle collisions is, in most cases, drivers not keeping an eye out for bicyclists. (Although in my experience, I'm happy to say that most do.) Not speed. If you're driving down a straight road, you can go at a fairly decent clip and still have no serious risk of hitting a bicyclist, unless the bicyclist swerves into your path, in which case, that's the biker's fault.
      The only time there are real issues is when the motorist wants to make a turn -- typically a right turn across (or unfortunately, into) the path of a bicyclist. Regrettably, those situations do result in all too many collisions, but again, that's the fault of drivers not looking out and paying attention. Not speed. (Indeed, the motorists are already going slow because they're _making a turn!)_
      So, to sum up, don't worry so much about speed, worry about the incompetent drivers and get them off the road.

    • @cocobailey777
      @cocobailey777 Год назад

      ​@@Milesco Speed IS dangerous, as it increases your chances of getting into a collision in the first place, it reduces your time to react in case anything happens in front of you, and studies have shown that even a 15mph increase in speed can have a serious impact on fatality rates. A person hit by a car traveling at 35 miles per hour is five times more likely to die than a person hit by a car traveling at 20 miles per hour. You say "speed isn't dangerous, collisions are" - that doesn't really make sense as the two are directly correlated with one another. You reduce your speed, you reduce your chance of hitting something or someone. German autobahns have no speed limits and they are safe BECAUSE OF THE INFRASTRUCTURE, which is exactly what is being talked about in this video. Nowhere in the video does Rob say "wow these highways are so safe because drivers are". Wide lanes, gentle curves, and straight roadways - all to keep people safe at 65mph. Infrastructure, infrastructure, infrastructure. It's the same thing for American highways as well, and the thing is, those are designed for you to go fast. _That's why they're highways._ Your local neighbourhood street does not need to be designed like a highway, which is (again) the message that this video is trying to make.
      You want to get to your destination at a reasonable speed and not at a 'granny's' pace, as you say. Then don't drive on the traffic calmed streets. That's the entire reason the traffic calming is there in the first place. You are acting like they are installing 50 speed bumps and chicanes and narrowing down the lanes to 2 feet wide in every street in your city. No. There's different types of roads for a reason (again, mentioned in the video), and you already what you need - arterial streets, for going fast - while the streets this video is talking about is for local neighbourhood streets, with people backing out of their driveways onto them and kids playing everywhere. These streets do not need to be designed like a highway (or a runway as Rob calls them). _You do not need to drive on them like it's a highway._
      I disagree with your point that roads exist only for cars. If you built a city with that mindset, you would get dystopian hellscapes with half the city paved with parking lots and multi lane stroads clogged with traffic snaking throughout the entire city. Oh wait, that's what most American suburbs look like nowadays. And those suburbs are an objectively bad place to live. You may not see it (I'm assuming you're reasonably car dependent judging by your response of "I want to go vroom vroom everywhere"), but dense walkable cities like in Europe are way better in terms of... well, everything. And guess what, part of the reason why that is is because you don't have people flying down those streets at 50mph.
      "No, that's what sidewalks are for" Many sidewalks in America either don't exist at all, or are in terrible condition, extremely narrow, and can be inaccessible to people with disabilities. So, uh, yeah, pedestrians are still a very important part of the conversation here. Plus, there have been plenty of accidents from drivers mounting the sidewalk and killing a pedestrian. So the one place that's supposed to be safe for pedestrians isn't really that safe, if you let people go a million miles an hour on them.
      Taking the bus is not the same as single occupancy motor vehicles in this context, as a well designed 'complete street' as Rob calls it should have some sort of transit priority. A lot of American public transit systems are absolutely terrible, and part of that is because the buses just get dumped onto the streets with the traffic and have to compete with other cars. Buses, when managed well, can take dozens of cars off the street which makes things better for everyone.
      And I can tell you've probably never ridden a bike for any reasonable amount of time in your life, because saying that you're fine with people passing by at 50mph right beside bikers (or any other vulnerable road users) is something any cyclist would never say. I've done commutes before on highway shoulders (it was permitted, for some reason) and having cars pass by you a few feet away at highway speeds is NOT pleasant at all. Do better.
      "So, to sum up, don't worry so much about speed, worry about the incompetent drivers and get them off the road."
      The problem with this statement is that it would only work in a utopian world where we could somehow magically detect every single bad driver and say "no driving 4 u". That's not how the world works - there are always going to be shitty drivers no matter how hard you try. So to mitigate the risk of those shitty drivers, you use infrastructure in order to lower the risk of collisions and make things safer for everyone. Such as... you know, _making people go slower._
      If the real cause of every single collision was drivers simply being incompetent and not paying attention (it isn't), then answer this. Would you rather those drivers make a mistake at 20mph, or 50mph?
      These are all points that are already being made in the video you're watching right now.

  • @Anonymus-ih7yb
    @Anonymus-ih7yb Год назад +1

    It’s interesting that the US has problems with roads to big and Germany for example has problems with roads that are to small because they were building to have like 10 horse carriages on them not 100 cars

  • @uhohhotdog
    @uhohhotdog Год назад +4

    I need to see an update when they’re done

  • @maho_nishizumi_tigertank
    @maho_nishizumi_tigertank Год назад +1

    “I don’t work for the city” - Road Guy Rob 2022

  • @bikequestwithmikewest
    @bikequestwithmikewest Год назад +22

    Great video Rob! You have some mad editing skills, some of the stuff you did takes forever to edit!
    It is unfortunate so many cities overbuilt and continue to overbuild their infrastructure. It is both more expensive in the short and long term and less safe. What cities need to understand is as Strong Towns suggests that a capital cost is also an ongoing operational cost. Every street and road will need to be maintained and rebuilt at some point. Also, though developers build the wider roads, cities typically have to pay or reimburse for widening beyond the needs of a project through impact fees or some other method depending on where you live.
    Hollister looks like they understand the speeding issues in their town and are trying to do something about it, which is great. Cities all around the country need to start understanding and adopting a safe systems approach as the FHWA is now finally supporting (though looking to the Dutch Sustainable Safety policy would provide some clarification).
    A big problem with safety on the arterial roads is the speeds are still too fast, that combined with all the access they allow, they are some of the most deadly in the US. The design of those have to change as well. As suggested in the video, if it is actually safe to walk and bike places, more people will do so and a city may actually help their traffic issues. The most important thing to get right to encourage more walking and biking is a city’s road plan. When roads are calmed and safer, then they aren’t such big deterrents or barriers to walking and biking.

  • @catherineromero1862
    @catherineromero1862 Год назад +1

    Palm Desert and Encinitas in California did very similar retrofits which includes some of all of the above. Additionally there is art work and appropriate drought tolerant plantings which serve to h soften these once very hardscaped through-ways. All contribute to causing drivers to go slower and actually visually interact with the surroundings. It doesn’t only slow traffic but beautifies the neighborhood.

  • @ahjgbhlahgaohgl
    @ahjgbhlahgaohgl Год назад +10

    So many pickup trucks lol

    • @GlitchUnpatched
      @GlitchUnpatched Год назад +2

      this state has become infested with them lol

  • @stefanc4520
    @stefanc4520 Год назад +1

    Both designs look absolutely horrendous. The fact he's bragging about the second one is hilariously pathetic 🤣🤣

  • @nicksgarage2
    @nicksgarage2 Год назад +4

    Maybe they watched one of your previous videos where you said to cut the number of lanes down. Since watching your videos I think a lot more about street design when I'm just driving around.

  • @captainsinclair7954
    @captainsinclair7954 Год назад

    I can see small, round, median curbs being placed between the main driving road and the Bicycle lanes later on. If the developers want to decorate them, they could use some native flora or perhaps some low-water plants, considering California’s current water crisis. The reason the curbs would be small and round (circular) is to A. create a speed bump to punish drivers for not watching their driving, and B. to allow the storm drains to still function as intended. If spread out, the “curb bumps” would still allow water to get to the existing storm drains while protecting cyclists.

  • @tyskigolf
    @tyskigolf Год назад

    Collectors where I live, (Surrey, BC) are typically underbuilt with no room for bike lanes. Instead of forcing developers to build arterials and collectors developers pay into a fund (development cost charges) and the city later retrofits older 2 lane roads, typically that had ditches or wide gravel shoulders and no sidewalks or very poor ones into 4 lane roads with protected bike lanes. Unfortunately only in the last few years did the city start building protected bike lanes so much of the existing network either has skinny painted bike lanes or nothing at all.

  • @Maxime_K-G
    @Maxime_K-G Год назад +6

    It's better to just preserve the right of way and only go beyond the 2 lanes when it's actually warranted. 2 lane roads can already carry a lot of traffic anyway and in that scenario they coul've built a nice multi use pathway in the shrubs besides it.

    • @blitzn00dle50
      @blitzn00dle50 Год назад +2

      My idea would be to put car lanes at the very edge of the road, 3 meters each, and then the rest can be a green median with a perfectly straight shared path. The median could be separated by a truck apron curb so emergency vehicles can hop onto the path

  • @M3rVsT4H
    @M3rVsT4H Год назад +1

    All these traffic calming ideas are 30 years old down under. So I've grown up with them. And I have a few comments. One persons idea of traffic calming, is some kid in a subaru's idea of a rally special stage. And a massive pain for moving trucks.
    And roundabouts. At their worst, a dangerous social experiment, at their best an inexpensive intersection. But now when people hurry to work, they speed up and brake between every roundabout, at any time of day, even when the roads are empty. Generating substantial wear and tear, noise and emissions. And there's the human factor. Unlike stop signs or lights. Roundabouts require drivers to use their judgement. And some people fail that challenge. I got wiped out on one by someone who just never got how they worked. They are good cheap intersections for low traffic streets. But not IMO suitable for regulating traffic speed or flow. Dudes with 37" tires will practically straight line them anyway.
    Finishing with a positive. The last city I lived in set aside the land for the wide suburban thoroughfares, but furnished them with rows of trees and wide median strips or footpaths. etc. And if they ever need to increase capacity, they just reclaim some of that furniture. It sure beats the heck out of paying for pavement you don't need.

  • @mathewmorgan9248
    @mathewmorgan9248 Год назад +3

    If somebody misread the plans, please explain away the cat-tracking. If you look closely you'll see little white paint marks between the yellow strips and in person you can see them elsewhere. Cat-tracking is used by the striping contractor to get approval of where the striping goes. The city inspector reviews the cat-tracking and either approves it or asks for changes. Was the city inspector derelict in his duties? Has he been fired? Or...could it be that this is just part of the sweeping hair-brained city planning implementations that are cursing this city lately? For instance Hollister has invented a new form of roundabout that doesn't have yield signs...just a normal intersection with a raised rubber circle in it. Instead of bicycle lanes some streets get a no-mans-land center lane useful to no one that pushes traffic closer to the sidewalk and parked cars.

  • @Elizabeth-vh6il
    @Elizabeth-vh6il Год назад

    American street designs are nuts! In Europe we'd normally have the opposite problem, traffic outgrowing the size of the road. But when we do want to make a road narrower to car traffic we think bike lanes separated from the traffic using kerbing, planting trees and grass, bus lanes and trams, not "Oh yeah, let's take a chicane design from a Formula 1 track and put it on a road so drivers can practice their high speed left right sweeps." A bus lane that emergency services could also use would solve your difficulties implementing speed bumps.

  • @TheBenghaziRabbit
    @TheBenghaziRabbit Год назад +5

    This is super interesting. Wonder how the litigation would go for the new lines being paved.

    • @KianLeiner
      @KianLeiner Год назад +4

      Luckily, there probably won't need to be any litigation. The city, per the contract specs, probably didn't pay the contractor for the striping, and won't pay until it's done correctly. The contractor will most likely come back and fix it, since they obviously want to get paid.

  • @DarkVoidIII
    @DarkVoidIII Год назад

    The mayor should put in rumble strips. Rumble strips that are bone jarring right to the teeth only if you're driving over them too fast!😂

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer Год назад

      Unfortunately, those are rather tricky to get right. Space them incorrectly and they can force people to drive *faster* to reduce vibration, especially in the larger vehicles that are increasingly common.

  • @Nhkg17
    @Nhkg17 Год назад +5

    Even that plan is completely wrong. The road should have been significantly physically narrowed and the bike path should have been behind a barrier, not plastic posts...
    Signs, lines and plastic bollards don't do much for safety...

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Год назад +1

      I', sure they'd be more than happy to do that if you send them the money for it.

  • @paulwilliams5208
    @paulwilliams5208 Год назад +1

    "I don't work for the city" well DON"T walk down the "middle" of the road - move the drain (8:45) when you can direct the rain TO the drain
    road markings are not an inhibiter people will just drive over them not even notice BUT if you have plastic street pylons this gets the impression of a smaller road thus slowing people

  • @risingtsun
    @risingtsun Год назад +8

    Rob why would you post this at 230 am im trying to sleep...
    But thank you

    • @TrickiVicBB71
      @TrickiVicBB71 Год назад

      And here I am up cause I went to bed early

  • @gregagnew9376
    @gregagnew9376 Год назад

    I have multiple years experience playing with Hot Wheels and I can say with confidence a loop-de-loop is REALLY good at slowing cars down.

  • @Sirmellowman
    @Sirmellowman Год назад +5

    I feel like the kind of people that actually follow those lines instead of just going straight are also the kind of people that get a booster shot every 6 months

  • @skwashua
    @skwashua Год назад +1

    How about a speed meter that controls a traffic light? If they are going 10+mph over the limit the traffic lights down the road will intentionally turn red to stop them?

  • @MentalEdge
    @MentalEdge Год назад +8

    They just tried to stop it from becoming a stroad. Commendable tbh.

    • @4149stonepony
      @4149stonepony Год назад +1

      The little bike agenda and "stroads". What is a stroad little bike person?

    • @MentalEdge
      @MentalEdge Год назад

      @@4149stonepony You could google it, big car guy. It's something that is bad for you, too. And you should want me on a bike, so you can keep the road to yourself. Advocating only for car lanes is just gonna force both of us into cars, instead of just the one who actually wants to drive one.

    • @4149stonepony
      @4149stonepony Год назад +2

      @@MentalEdge Yeah I could google everything I just wanted to hear from the little bike people what the actual definition of a "stroad" is. Or my favorite is induced demand another ambiguity little cyclistas love, so let me destroy that for you. Would you rather have a speeding problem or induced demand? Wait, what speed should traffic be allowed to go, so that cyclists feel 'safe' 3 mph? So is it still a cars fault if you run into it and it is parked? Biking, while great for exercise and recreation makes for real shitty transportation, but don't tell the status hungry virtue signalers that.

    • @MentalEdge
      @MentalEdge Год назад

      @@4149stonepony I don't think you're looking for discussion. If you were, you'd be coming at me with information, stats, and google results. Not this girly passive aggressive use of the word "little", etc. You're clearly either a troll, or far too entrenched to be capable of reasonable discourse on the matter.
      There's nothing ambiguous about induced demand, it's literally a peer reviewed research item with hard numbers available.
      The answer to making cycling safe btw isn't limiting the speed of cars anywhere but in places where they intermingle with other traffic (on walking streets, such as in superblocks), it's properly segregating the lanes and paths of the different forms of traffic in the first place. Paint does little to stop a metric ton of metal, there's a reason we do the bare minimum of giving sidewalks a curb.
      I'm not sure if I'll block you yet. You seem like the type of shitslinger that might be fun to screw with.
      As for crashing into parked cars? I mean that's just a smol brain attempt at getting a rise out of someone.

    • @MentalEdge
      @MentalEdge Год назад

      @@4149stonepony Arguing for cars-only is like saying elevators are a must, because in your house, the fridge is on the third floor while your kitchen is on the first.
      The real solution is to fix your wacky zoning laws so you can put the fridge in the damn kitchen, and use your hands to get what you need for cooking.
      It's not like elevators shouldn't exists, they serve an important purpose. But maybe don't use the space they take up as an excuse to place stuff further apart (parking lots), nor discount the usefulness of stairs when you only need to move a floor or two.
      And it's not like I never use cars. But I only need to like once or twice a year. Meanwhile, the US has used cars as an excuse to allow their cities to sprawl into inefficient money-sinks that makes their daily use mandatory, whether you can afford it or not.

  • @bertpineapple3738
    @bertpineapple3738 Год назад

    This guy is so good. I'm watching this from Britain. With no real interest in American roads. He really should have his own show.

  • @matthewparker9276
    @matthewparker9276 8 месяцев назад

    Chicanes are in common use in Australia to slow traffic on long straight streets, but they aren't just painted on to be ignored. Instead the curb is brought in to interrupt the driving lane. Sometimes a tree or other landscaping is planted there as well to really make it obvious. This is more expensive, though, and does need some thought if you want to have bikelanes.

  • @EricSees
    @EricSees Год назад

    Some planters down the center of the street would be a very inexpensive solution to the problem, while simultaneously beautifying the area

  • @louisliu5638
    @louisliu5638 Год назад

    We've got a couple of blind corners right in a neighbourhood (one blind has a cross walk) in Victoria, BC and everyone was speeding until we put up a large hand painted "DUCK CROSSING" SIGN. it was a really really CUTE baby duck.

  • @sylvainmichaud2262
    @sylvainmichaud2262 Год назад +1

    Lines are stupid.
    Give the space back to the other users.
    Makes the side walks wider, plant trees, make separated cycling path (not just painted lines) so that you end up with single lane for each direction. People will slow down.

  • @Hunty49
    @Hunty49 Год назад

    If you want to slow people down, don't put obstructions or make them do maneuvers, make the road feel claustrophobic. Put the pedestrian footpath and cycleway next to each other, put a dirt medium between that and the road. Have a dirt medium in the middle. Plant trees in those dirt mediums. This will provide a barrier between slow moving pedestrians/cyclists and when grown, provide shade for the pedestrians. The grown trees on the side and centre medium will give the feeling of lack of space, inherently slowing cars down. Plus it will provide shade for the road so it doesn't retain the heat from the sun, radiating that heat during hot summer days and allowing the asphalt to last longer as it won't get soft.

  • @SS-_.1
    @SS-_.1 Год назад

    The mayor handled this very well. He did not go with "this is exactly what we planned to do" excuse. Or bash up the contractors or blame his subordinates for this situation. He accepted that it was wrong. He explained it the best as an error in interpretation. And followed it up with what is being done to remedy it. That's something many politicians can learn from.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Год назад

    Water doesn't wreck asphalt. It recks the road bed under the asphalt. Asphalt just keeps the roadbed dry. That's it. It doesn't make the road stronger it just keeps the road from turning into mud.