Title: Needs and Requirements of Blind Pedestrians at Signalized Intersections
1Needs and Requirements of Blind Pedestrians at
Signalized Intersections
- Workshop on Accommodating Pedestrians at
Signalized Intersections - Janet M. Barlow
- Accessible Design for the Blind
- January 11, 2009
2Blind may not mean totally blind
3Intersection as seen by someone with normal
vision
4Central vision loss
5Peripheral Vision Loss
6Overall acuity loss
7Totally blind
8How do people who are blind or who have low
vision travel?
- Sighted (human) guide
- White cane
- Dog guide
- Telescope or other low vision aids
- No aid
9Pedestrians who are blind or who have low vision
- May travel to unfamiliar destinations for
shopping, errands, visiting friends, childrens
activities, work, or other purposes, just like
those who are fully sighted - May have to figure out intersections and
intersections crossings when they arrive at them
10Street crossing tasks
- Locate edge of the street
- Determine where to begin crossing (locate
crosswalk) - Establish crossing direction and alignment
- Determine traffic control and use pushbutton, if
necessary - Decide when to begin crossing
- Maintain alignment during crossing
11Traditional strategies
- Walk up to corner
- Maintain travel direction
- Listen through a signal cycle
- Cross with the surge of traffic traveling
parallel to crosswalk - Maintain direction by listening to vehicles and
other cues
12Problems in the current intersection environment
- Curb ramps
- Rounded corners (large radius)
- Wide streets
- Complex intersection geometry
- Actuation and complex signalization
- Need to use pedestrian pushbutton
13Street crossing tasks
- Locate edge of the street
- Determine where to begin crossing (locate
crosswalk) - Establish crossing direction and alignment
- Determine traffic control and use pushbutton, if
necessary - Decide when to begin crossing
- Maintain alignment during crossing
14Locate edge of the street
- Detectable warnings
- Also called truncated domes or truncated dome
detectable warnings - Required on curb ramps or blended transitions
at crossings - Not yet installed everywhere
15NOT detectable warnings
16Detectable warning
17Detectable warning at curb ramps
24 in direction of travel at back of curb Full
width of ramp or level area
18Street crossing tasks
- Locate edge of the street
- Determine where to begin crossing (locate
crosswalk) - Establish crossing direction and alignment
- Determine traffic control and use pushbutton, if
necessary - Decide when to begin crossing
- Maintain alignment during crossing
19Crosswalk in line with sidewalk
20Crosswalk offset from corner can be problematic
21May not cross at crosswalk
Adding planter strip could help
22Street crossing tasks
- Locate edge of the street
- Determine where to begin crossing (locate
crosswalk) - Establish crossing direction and alignment
- Determine traffic control and use pushbutton, if
necessary - Decide when to begin crossing
- Maintain alignment during crossing
23Crossing direction and alignment
- Still working on solutions
- Detectable warnings dont provide alignment info
- Ramp design
- Two ramps per corner where possible
- Align ramp with travel direction
- BUT.requirement for ramp to be perpendicular to
the curb and gutter requires ramp to angle toward
the street at large radius corners - Provide edge that is aligned with travel
direction? - Sound of accessible signal may provide alignment
information
24Example of curb ramp designs that provide
alignment cues
25Pedestrian pushbuttons can also affect alignment
- Have to deviate to push button
- Must cross on next pedestrian phase
- cant listen to parallel traffic phase to realign
26Street crossing tasks
- Locate edge of the street
- Determine where to begin crossing (locate
crosswalk) - Establish crossing direction and alignment
- Determine traffic control and use pushbutton, if
necessary - Decide when to begin crossing
- Maintain alignment during crossing
27Pedestrian Pushbuttons
- Is there a pushbutton?
- Where is it?
- Have I found the pushbutton for the street Im
crossing?
28Decide when to begin crossing
- Traditional cues to time to cross
- Stopped traffic on cross street
- Surge of traffic in parallel lane closest to
crosswalk
29Traffic cues may not be available where there are
- Low volumes of traffic parallel to crosswalk
- Crossing major street
- T intersections (crossing top of T)
- Heavy turning traffic volumes
- Exclusive pedestrian phases
- Leading pedestrian phases
30Newer type of Accessible Pedestrian Signals (APS)
- Features provide information about pushbutton and
pedestrian signal indications - Pushbutton Locator tone
- Audible and Vibrotactile Walk indications
- Tactile arrow
- Automatic volume adjustment
31Speakers at the pushbutton
32Pushbutton Locator Tone
- Sound comes from the pushbutton
- Provides information about pushbutton presence
and location - 1 tone per second, each tone less than 0.15
seconds in duration - Volume set to be heard within 6 12 feet, or at
the building line, whichever is less - Different sounds acceptable (click, beep, etc)
33Tactile arrow
- Raised arrow
- May be on the pushbutton, on part of the device,
or on sign above the pushbutton - aligned with direction of travel on the
crosswalk controlled by the pushbutton
34Tactile Arrow examples
35Recommended WALK indications
- A rapid tick WALK indication (sound on slide 6)
at locations where the speakers for APS for two
different crosswalks are separated by at least 10
feet - Vibrotactile WALK indication - arrow (or other
surface on pushbutton unit) that vibrates during
WALK
36Pushbutton-integrated APS
- Continuous pushbutton locator tone with rapid
tick WALK indication
Sounds attached click on photo to hear sounds
37Pushbutton-integrated APS
- Continuous pushbutton locator tone followed with
speech walk indication
Sounds attached click on photo to hear sounds
38Automatic volume adjustment
- Volume of pushbutton locator tone and audible
walk indications adjusts in response to ambient
sound - Louder when traffic is loud or there is other
noise at the intersection - Quiet when traffic or other sounds are quieter
(night)
39APS Location is critical
- Provide information to the user through proximity
to the departure point - Signal can be quieter due to proximity
40Installation recommendations
- Beside the landing of the curb ramp
- Separated by more than 10 feet from other APS on
corner - MUTCD says within 5 feet of crosswalk line and
within 10 feet of the curb
41Installation example - APS separated by 10 feet
(3m)
- Reachable from level landing, within 10 ft of
curb, within 5 feet of crosswalk lines
42Installation example - APS aligned with crosswalk
lines
43Street crossing tasks
- Locate edge of the street
- Determine where to begin crossing (locate
crosswalk) - Establish crossing direction and alignment
- Determine traffic control and use pushbutton, if
necessary - Decide when to begin crossing
- Maintain alignment during crossing
44Maintaining alignment
- Listen to traffic, waiting and moving
- Road slope and camber
45Features that help pedestrians who are blind
- Simple geometry
- Shorter crossings
- Landscaping or barriers to direct to crossing
location and prevent crossing at the wrong place - Curb ramp that is aligned as closely as possible
to direction of travel on the crosswalk - Detectable warning at street edge and edge of
splitter island cut-throughs - Raised splitter islands with edges aligned in
crosswalk travel direction - Accessible pedestrian signals, with new features,
for crossings
46Modifications that make intersections accessible
to pedestrians who are blind are helpful to ALL
pedestrians
47Acknowledgements
- Some photos courtesy of Lukas Franck, Michael
Ronkin, Lois Thibault, and Billie Louise (Beezy)
Bentzen - Graphics from Accessible Pedestrian Signals A
Guide to Best Practice
48Questions??For more information, contact
- Janet M. Barlow
- Accessible Design for the Blind
- 770-317-0611
- jmbarlow_at_accessforblind.org