Efforts to regulate the flow of cars have resulted in gridlock
Most traffic lights are a pernicious form of state control and, more worryingly, downright dangerous, because they distract motorists from what other road users are doing, says the chairman of Britain’s National Trust, Sir Simon Jenkins.
Plainly, some traffic lights are vital. Without them, chaos would reign at plenty of major junctions, and at access points to main arteries. But they have multiplied in places where they are simply not necessary, and where they stop and start the traffic needlessly, making journey times slower and pollution worse. Moreover, along with signs, barriers and other examples of street furniture - a collective term which sounds rather quaint, yet is anything but - they clutter British roads terribly.
There are now more than 25,000 sets of lights in the UK - around a third more than there were a decade ago - and London alone accounts for almost a quarter of these. Yet anyone who drives regularly in the capital is all too aware of the spectacle of acres of empty Tarmac ahead, and a line of stationary vehicles behind. The culprit, practically every time, is a red light. The same applies in most major towns and cities.
Too often, it feels as if a three-mile journey, for example, comes to a crunching stop again and again because so many of the lights you must pass through are at red.
Another means of regulating the flow of traffic is the roundabout - first seen on a public road in Britain in 1909, in Letchworth, Hertfordshire. Yet now many roundabouts have also been fitted with traffic lights - a belt-and-braces approach to planning that creates far more problems than it solves.
As so dispiritingly often in transport-related matters, continental Europe makes Britain look backward by comparison. We might have an image of the hapless French or Italian traffic policeman frantically blowing his whistle and waving his arms, while presiding over hooting, tooting gridlock, but the reality is that the systems tend to work in those countries, where at least the traffic is generally always on the move.
Yet the traffic policeman has all but disappeared from British streets, replaced by automated technology that makes robots of drivers. And robots are programmed to respond to signals, but not to situations.
If traffic lights are removed, drivers are forced to pay more attention to their surroundings, and to other drivers on the road, in order to keep themselves safe. And that means they drive with more caution.
If you think these arguments are all pie in the sky, consider that more than a decade ago, in Drachten in Northern Holland, a town of about 50,000 inhabitants, planners began the systematic removal of all 15 sets of traffic lights, replacing them with roundabouts and expanded cycle lanes. It was a radical experiment, but it worked triumphantly.
Road death statistics diminished by more than 50 per cent, and although there was initially a slight increase in the number of minor collisions, the visionary road engineer behind the scheme suggested that these were almost to be encouraged.
‘We want small accidents, in order to prevent serious ones in which people get hurt,’ said Hans Monderman. ‘It shifts the emphasis . . . to the driver being responsible for his or her own risk. We only want traffic lights where they are useful, and I haven’t found anywhere where they are useful yet.’
Mr Monderman died of cancer in 2008, although not before he had seen his ‘shared space’ concept successfully introduced in many countries. He once invoked the flow of people around ice-rinks to explain it. ‘Skaters work out things for themselves and it works wonderfully well,’ he said. ‘I am not an anarchist, but I don’t like rules which are ineffective and street furniture which tells people how to behave.’
In Britain, the amount of street furniture has reached an all-time high, but there are some signs that there is light at the end of a fume-filled tunnel.
In London, Mayor Boris Johnson has ordered a review of thousands of sets of traffic lights, 20 of which have already been removed.
And Cheltenham Borough Council began a three-week experiment, turning off a set of lights in a busy road in an attempt to reduce congestion, not to mention discourage the ‘amber gamblers’ who see signals about to turn to red and speed up rather than slow down.
If such schemes are to gather pace in Britain, it must need to disregard the expensive consultants and the health-and-safety inspectors who for too long have been allowed to collaborate with urban planners, turning our streets into over-regulated corridors.
Sometimes, these corridors are regulated at the expense of one form of transport over another. More than 8,000 sets of traffic lights nationwide are currently programmed to give buses priority over cars, and whereas that often makes sense on paper, on Tarmac it frequently backfires to cause long queues of cars on the main carriageway - thus betraying a grimly myopic, non-integrated transport policy.
As Hans Monderman knew, all road-users, from drivers of lorries and buses to cyclists and pedestrians, should be accorded equal importance.
Daily Mail
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