A Green Light for Common Sense
To Slow Drivers, German Town Drops Traffic Signals and Lane Markers

By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, December 24, 2007; A09

BOHMTE, Germany -- Like countless other communities, this west German
town lived for years with a miserable traffic problem. Each day,
thousands of cars and big trucks barreled along the two-lane main
street, forcing pedestrians and cyclists to scamper for their lives.

The usual remedies -- from safety crossings to speed traps -- did no
good. So the citizens of Bohmte decided to take a big risk. Since
September, they've been tearing up the sidewalks, removing curbs and
erasing street markers as part of a radical plan to abandon nearly all
traffic regulations and force people to rely on common sense and
courtesy instead.

This contrarian approach to traffic management, known as shared space,
is gaining a foothold in Europe. Towns in the Netherlands, Denmark,
Britain and Belgium have tossed out their traffic lights and stop
signs in a bid to reclaim their streets for everyone.

The assumption is that drivers are accustomed to owning the road and
rarely pay attention to speed limits or caution signs anyway. Removing
traffic lights and erasing lane markers, the thinking goes, will cause
drivers to get nervous and slow down.

"Generally speaking, what we want is for people to be confused," said
Willi Ladner, a deputy mayor in Bohmte. "When they're confused,
they'll be more alert and drive more carefully."

The European Union has subsidized shared space programs in seven
cities in five countries. Interest is spreading worldwide, with cities
in countries from Australia to Canada sending emissaries to Europe to
see whether the experiment works.

In Bohmte, a town of 13,000 people in the state of Lower Saxony,
residents were tired of all the trucks whizzing along Bremen Street,
the main route through the city. Since the street is categorized as a
state highway, German law prevented local officials from banning
trucks. They considered building a bypass instead, but merchants
worried it would suck too many vehicles out of the city center,
hurting business.

In 2005, city leaders learned about shared space and decided to give
it a try. One of the biggest obstacles was persuading regional traffic
bureaucrats to approve the unorthodox approach. "They were grinding
their teeth, but finally they agreed," Ladner said.

On Nov. 26, a small section of Bremen Street -- absent signs and curbs
-- reopened to traffic. With no marked spaces, people can park their
cars wherever they want, as long as they don't leave them in the
middle of the road. The new pavement is a reddish-brick color,
intended to send a subtle signal to drivers that they are entering a
special zone.

Only two traffic rules remain. Drivers cannot go more than 30 mph, the
German speed limit for city driving. And everyone has to yield to the
right, regardless of whether it's a car, a bike or a baby carriage.

Peter Hilbricht, a Bohmte police officer in charge of traffic
planning, said the main intersection in town generated about 50
accidents a year before the changes. He expects the number to plummet,
citing the experience of other cities that have embraced the shared
space approach.

In Haren, the Netherlands, for example, the number of accidents at one
intersection dropped by 95 percent, from 200 a year to about 10,
Hilbricht said. "You can't deny the numbers," he added. "Half the
world is eager to see what's going to happen with this program."

Old habits, however, can be hard to break. Especially in Germany, a
rules-obsessed nation where people who dare to jaywalk can expect a
loud scolding from other pedestrians, even if no cars are in sight.

Asked to give a personal demonstration, Hilbricht put Bohmte's lack of
rules to the test. Picking a random spot, he bravely stepped into
oncoming traffic and across the road -- an act that could have earned
him a fine pretty much anywhere else in Germany.

Cars immediately slowed down and gave Hilbricht a wide berth, although
he admitted that his police uniform may have worked to his advantage.

When a reporter tried the same thing, two approaching drivers barely
hit their brakes, including one guy in a van who babbled away on his
cellphone as he sped past.

Ladner, the deputy mayor, acknowledged that it could take a year or
two before residents get used to the changes. But city officials are
confident. They are spending $3.3 million to overhaul parts of Bremen
Street by next summer and hope to expand the special zone gradually
over the next 10 to 20 years.

"We're very optimistic," Ladner said. "If others can do it, then why
not us? It will be difficult for some people, yes, but it can be
accomplished."

Although shared space is attracting lots of attention in Europe, no
one expects Germany to shut down its famed autobahns anytime soon.

The program is designed only for public spaces where pedestrians and
cyclists share routes with cars. Traffic engineers say it could lead
to gridlock if introduced in high-traffic areas, such as large cities.

Practically speaking, the shared space concept works only at
intersections that attract fewer than 15,000 vehicles a day, said
Juergen Gerlach, a professor at the Center of Traffic and Transport at
the University of Wuppertal. The approach can backfire if it covers
more than a half-mile of road at a time, he said. Otherwise, drivers
would get too frustrated with the slow pace and bypass the area.

Some residents in Bohmte said that although something needed to be
done, they remain unconvinced that doing away with all the street
signs and safety measures will do the job.

"It's how people are these days -- everyone is in a hurry, everyone
just takes off," said Maria Stolte, who pulled her Mercedes in front
of a bakery in the no-sign zone to buy some bread. "No one looks or
pauses or is courteous. I hope it will slow people down."

At the same time, she doesn't plan on taking her bike for a spin
anytime soon. "I don't know if I will feel comfortable riding down
this street," she said.

The baker, Gisela Luebbert, is also skeptical.

"What they have done is pretty, no question about that," she said.
"They've done a nice job with the design, but was it absolutely
necessary? I don't know. We'll see if it's worth all the trouble."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/23/AR2007122302487_pf.html

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