Estimating Potential Effect of Speed Limits, Built Environment, and Other Factors on Severity of Pedestrian and Cyclist Injuries in Crashes

Author:

Zahabi Seyed Amir H.1,Strauss Jillian2,Manaugh Kevin3,Miranda-Moreno Luis F.4

Affiliation:

1. Room 398, Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics, 817 Sherbrooke Street, West, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2K6, Canada.

2. Room 396, Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics, 817 Sherbrooke Street, West, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2K6, Canada.

3. Room 410, Department of Urban Planning; Macdonald Engineering Building, 817 Sherbrooke Street, West, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2K6, Canada.

4. Room 268, Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics, 817 Sherbrooke Street, West, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2K6, Canada.

Abstract

Road facilities in urban areas are a major source of injury for nonmotorized road users despite the benefits of nonmotorized transportation. In particular, large Canadian cities such as Montreal face serious problems with pedestrian and cyclist safety. To address these problems, funds are continually allocated through different safety improvement programs such as reduction of speed limits, improvement of intersections, and increased traffic enforcement. However, few analytical tools help to identify and quantify the benefits of countermeasures (e.g., roadway design, speed management strategies, or land use policies) in reducing accident frequency and severity. Injury severity models were developed to determine the effects of road design, built environment, speed limits, and other factors (e.g., vehicle characteristics and movement type) on injury severity levels of pedestrians and cyclists involved in collisions with motor vehicles. Sources of data included police reports describing vehicle–pedestrian and vehicle–cyclist collisions, as well as information on land use, transit network, and road design attributes from the city of Montreal. The impacts of road design, land use, built environment, and other strategies on the injury severity levels of vulnerable road users were investigated. Factors such as darkness, vehicle movement, whether an accident occurred at an intersection, vehicle type, and land use mix affected the severity of pedestrian injuries from collisions. For cyclists, however, only vehicle movement and whether the accident occurred at a signalized intersection had significant effects on the severity of the injury.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

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