Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Relationship between Predicted Speed Reduction on Horizontal Curves and Safety on Two-Lane Rural Roads in Spain
According to different studies, speed reduction is considered one of the major factors in contributing road safety. For that reason, several guidelines have been recommended for maximum desirable speed reductions from tangents to horizontal curves and for maximum differentials between design and operating speeds on horizontal curves. The Interactive Highway Safety Design Model (IHSDM) Design Consistency Module presents an analysis of the relationship between speed reduction and crashes for horizontal curves on U.S. two-lane rural highways. This paper presents the relationship between speed reduction and crashes for horizontal curves on Spanish two-lane rural roads. A model for using regression analysis to predict crashes is presented. Exposure, curve length (CL), and difference in 85th-percentile speeds () between successive tangents and horizontal curves, as well as between successive curves, are used. The model’s coefficients were different from the ones obtained for U.S. highways, although the values of the goodness-of-fit criteria were similar. In addition, the relationship between crashes and different speeds is analyzed, taking the difference in speed as a speed differential not exceeded by 85% of the drivers traveling under free-flow conditions (), instead of considering it as . The two models ( versus ) give very similar results.
Relationship between Predicted Speed Reduction on Horizontal Curves and Safety on Two-Lane Rural Roads in Spain
According to different studies, speed reduction is considered one of the major factors in contributing road safety. For that reason, several guidelines have been recommended for maximum desirable speed reductions from tangents to horizontal curves and for maximum differentials between design and operating speeds on horizontal curves. The Interactive Highway Safety Design Model (IHSDM) Design Consistency Module presents an analysis of the relationship between speed reduction and crashes for horizontal curves on U.S. two-lane rural highways. This paper presents the relationship between speed reduction and crashes for horizontal curves on Spanish two-lane rural roads. A model for using regression analysis to predict crashes is presented. Exposure, curve length (CL), and difference in 85th-percentile speeds () between successive tangents and horizontal curves, as well as between successive curves, are used. The model’s coefficients were different from the ones obtained for U.S. highways, although the values of the goodness-of-fit criteria were similar. In addition, the relationship between crashes and different speeds is analyzed, taking the difference in speed as a speed differential not exceeded by 85% of the drivers traveling under free-flow conditions (), instead of considering it as . The two models ( versus ) give very similar results.
Relationship between Predicted Speed Reduction on Horizontal Curves and Safety on Two-Lane Rural Roads in Spain
de Oña, Juan (Autor:in) / Garach, Laura (Autor:in) / Calvo, Francisco (Autor:in) / García-Muñoz, Teresa (Autor:in)
30.08.2013
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
Speed Changes in the Vicinity of Horizontal Curves on Two-Lane Rural Roads
Online Contents | 2007
|Safety Benefits of Spiral Transitions on Horizontal Curves on Two-Lane Rural Roads
British Library Online Contents | 1998
|Safety Benefits of Spiral Transitions on Horizontal Curves on Two-Lane Rural Roads
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1998
|Safety Evaluation of Horizontal Curves on Rural Undivided Roads
British Library Online Contents | 2013
|