weepej wrote:
Personally I think we should leave motorways out of this.
They are designed specifically to allow cars to travel at high speeds, there are no pedestrians on them (but you shouldn't drive assuming this), no t junctions, no sharp corners.
But it does prove a very good point doesn't it: roads can be engineered to be a lot safer, even with their high speeds. Why can't the same principles (no concealed entrances, rises of road surfaces, muddy runoffs, pinchpoints etc) be applied to other roads too?
weepej wrote:
Now, I sense that what a lot of people would like if for ALL roads to be designed to motorway standards.
Sensing the need to halt a potential strawman: I doubt many people would like to have motorway speed traffic passing through their residential streets.
Engineering roads to remove nasty hidden surprises would be great for any road, even urban roads (if only for the better sightlines), of course we always have to cater for non-drivers who need to travel too. We can have safer driving and interaction without the segregation other countries suffer from.
weepej wrote:
How can road be dangerous?
Roads can be dangerous by having hidden or otherwise unobvious hazards (no concealed entrances, rises of road surfaces, muddy runoffs, pinchpoints etc). I did say
this to you just a few posts ago; so why did you quote me without addressing the pertinent question contained within?
weepej wrote:
Straightening out a curvy road doesn't make it safer.
...
They are designed specifically to allow cars to travel at high speeds, there are no [...] no sharp corners.
Make up your mind!