Are signalized intersections with cycle tracks safer? A case–control study based on automated surrogate safety analysis using video data

•Novel methodology to investigate the safety effects of cycle tracks.•Automated video-based surrogate safety method.•Interactions between cyclists and turning vehicles.•23 intersections and more than 90h of video in Montreal.•Validation of surrogate safety measures by comparing them to accident data...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Accident analysis and prevention Vol. 86; pp. 161 - 172
Main Authors: Zangenehpour, Sohail, Strauss, Jillian, Miranda-Moreno, Luis F., Saunier, Nicolas
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-01-2016
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Summary:•Novel methodology to investigate the safety effects of cycle tracks.•Automated video-based surrogate safety method.•Interactions between cyclists and turning vehicles.•23 intersections and more than 90h of video in Montreal.•Validation of surrogate safety measures by comparing them to accident data. Cities in North America have been building bicycle infrastructure, in particular cycle tracks, with the intention of promoting urban cycling and improving cyclist safety. These facilities have been built and expanded but very little research has been done to investigate the safety impacts of cycle tracks, in particular at intersections, where cyclists interact with turning motor-vehicles. Some safety research has looked at injury data and most have reached the conclusion that cycle tracks have positive effects of cyclist safety. The objective of this work is to investigate the safety effects of cycle tracks at signalized intersections using a case–control study. For this purpose, a video-based method is proposed for analyzing the post-encroachment time as a surrogate measure of the severity of the interactions between cyclists and turning vehicles travelling in the same direction. Using the city of Montreal as the case study, a sample of intersections with and without cycle tracks on the right and left sides of the road were carefully selected accounting for intersection geometry and traffic volumes. More than 90h of video were collected from 23 intersections and processed to obtain cyclist and motor-vehicle trajectories and interactions. After cyclist and motor-vehicle interactions were defined, ordered logit models with random effects were developed to evaluate the safety effects of cycle tracks at intersections. Based on the extracted data from the recorded videos, it was found that intersection approaches with cycle tracks on the right are safer than intersection approaches with no cycle track. However, intersections with cycle tracks on the left compared to no cycle tracks seem to be significantly safer. Results also identify that the likelihood of a cyclist being involved in a dangerous interaction increases with increasing turning vehicle flow and decreases as the size of the cyclist group arriving at the intersection increases. The results highlight the important role of cycle tracks and the factors that increase or decrease cyclist safety. Results need however to be confirmed using longer periods of video data.
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ISSN:0001-4575
1879-2057
DOI:10.1016/j.aap.2015.10.025