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Four-Lane to Three-Lane Conversions In Iowa: A Summary. Results from Several Research Studies of the Impacts on Safety. Iowa Department of Transportation Office of Traffic and Safety Iowa State University Center for Transportation Research and Education. Preface.
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Four-Lane to Three-Lane Conversions In Iowa:A Summary Results from Several Research Studies of the Impacts on Safety Iowa Department of Transportation Office of Traffic and Safety Iowa State University Center for Transportation Research and Education
Preface • The research results I am presenting belong to others. • Their permission in doing so is greatly appreciated.
The Researchers • Michael Pawlovich, Iowa DOT • Alicia Carriquiry, ISU Statistics Department • Win Lee, ISU Statistics Department • Tom Stout, CTRE • Keith Knapp, formerly CTRE • Karen Giese, formerly CTRE • Tom Welch, Iowa DOT (sponsor)
Presentation Outline • 4 lane to 3 lane basics • Results from “traditional” safety studies • Results from Bayesian safety study • Conclusions
The Basics • Converting an existing 4-lane roadway to a 3- lane roadway typically 2-lanes with a center continuous two-way left-turn lane (TWLTL) • The addition of the turn lane is the critical ingredient for improved traffic flow and safety • May free up enough room for bike lanes or parking Source: Huang et al./HSIS 2002,2004,2005
The Iowa 4 Lane To 3 Lane Experience Before • Iowa DOT sees these conversions as positive in terms of both safety and quality of life After
Conversion Guidelines • When conversions seem to make sense • ADT < 20,000 • Urban or small city arterial or collector with a posted speed of 30 to 45 mph • History of left-turn related crashes • Broadside and rear end collisions • Significant commercial and/or residential driveway density • Question: is there a density that is too high? • Significant left-turning volumes
Source: Iowa DOT RoadView Two Example 4-Lanes Clear Lake, IA – US 18 EB (west of Clear Lake) Storm Lake, IA – US 7 EB !!! Left-turning vehicle slows van
Source: Iowa DOT RoadView Two Example 3-Lanes Storm Lake, IA – US 7 EB Storm Lake, IA – US 7 EB Left-turning vehicle has no effect
1/8 Multiple signs Long transition length Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
2/8 From 45 mph Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
3/8 Passed after signage Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
4/8 Plenty of time to change lanes Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
5/8 Left-turning van 4-lane to 3-lane transition Opposing flow queue headways Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
6/8 Multiple left-turning pickups Parallel Parking Opposing flow queue headways Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
7/8 Signing and traffic markings Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
8/8 3-lane to 4-lane transition Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
1/8 From 45 mph to 35 mph Multiple signs Long transition length Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
2/8 Multiple signs Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
3/8 3-lane section begins Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
4/8 Parallel Parking Multiple left-turning vans, pickup to turn right-on-red soon Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
5/8 Parallel Parking Van finishes left movement, pickup turns right-on-red Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
6/8 $1.52/gallon!!! Parallel Parking Right-turning car, van waiting for opposing left, opposing thru traffic not hindered Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
7/8 Pedestrian signs Parallel Parking More lefts and thru traffic Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
8/8 3-lane to 4-lane transition Source: Iowa DOT RoadView
Analysis History • Treatments in Iowa (All Potential Case Studies) • 15 from 1993 – 2003 • 2001: Guidelines (CTRE) • 4 to 3 Conversion Safety Impact Studies • 2002: Huang et al. (FHWA/HSIS) • Showed small reduction in crash density and no reduction in crash rate (this study is the “odd duck” here) • Fall 2004: Matched-Pair Before/After (CTRE) • Spring 2005: Bayesian Before/After (ISU Statistics Department)
Yoked Pair Comparison • 4-3 conversion segments were compared with similar “control” segments • City population within 20% • Corridor traffic (AADT) within 20% • Physically similar (length, land use, access management, etc.)
Yoked Pair Results • Net effect – 27 to 28% reduction in crash rate
Crash Rate Analysis • Before – 8.86 per MVM • After – 4.45 per MVM
Older Driver Analysis • How did older drivers fare? • Age 65 and older – average crash rate of 7 before (on the 4 lane), 2.9 after (on the 3 lane) • Age 75 and older – average of 3.3 before, 1.5 after
Younger Driver Analysis • How about younger drivers? • Age 25 and younger – average of 28.1 before, 13.3 after • If you have teenagers, now you know why their insurance rates are so high!
Injury Crashes Only • Net benefit, 27% reduction in injury crashes
Conclusions • Overall crash frequency reduction of 21% • Improved crash rate (27-28% reduction) • Improvements for both older and younger drivers • Reduced injury numbers and rate
Bayesian Before/After Study • Objective: Assess whether 4 lane to 3 lane conversions appear to result in crash reductions on Iowa roads • Control for “regression to the mean” phenomenon • Sometimes, crash rate improvements are simply random • Much more rigorous study than the “traditional” study just described
Bayesian Before/After • Data • 15 treatment and 15* control • 23 years (1982-2004) • Volumes: 2,030 to 15,350 (1982-2004) * One control site served as a matched pair for two treatment sites.
Data Pairings* Treatment Control * Not essential for Bayesian, more for discussion purposes
Monthly Crash Densities Treatment Control
Monthly Crash Rates Intervention
Modelling/Statistics • Crashes: random, rare count events • Model: Poisson w/ log mean expressed as a piece- wise linear function of: - time period (months) - seasonal effects - random effect for each site • Adopted a Bayesian statistical framework for estimation of model parameters
Results/Discussion • 25.2% (23.2% - 27.8%) in crashes/mile 25% • 18.8% (17.9% - 20.0%) in crash rate 19%
Results/Discussion • Agrees with: • CTRE Matched-pair Before/After study • Why? Prior Sioux Center speed study • 4-5 mph in 85th percentile free flow speed • 12-14% in percentage of vehicles traveling more than 5 mph over the speed limit (i.e., vehicles traveling 35 mph or higher).
Conclusions • 4 lane to 3 lane conversions appear to be successful treatments for calming traffic under the right conditions • They can be very effective in improving traffic safety • They are not especially problematic for either elderly or young drivers