Performance Measures for Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety: Methodologies for Monitoring Traffic Volumes and Assessing Exposure to Risk
Principal Investigator(s):
Greg Lindsey, Professor, Humphrey School of Public AffairsProject summary:
This project presents models for estimating bicyclist exposure to risk and crash risk. Direct demand models for estimating weekday PM peak-period bicyclist exposure to risk are estimated from a database of PM peak-period bicycle counts in Minneapolis and used to estimate exposure for the street network. Bicycle crashes in Minneapolis are described and crash risk is assessed. Probability models to assess crash risk at both intersections and along segments show that both bicyclist exposure and vehicular exposure are associated with the likelihood of a bicycle crash. Estimates of exposure at 184 roadway-trail crossings are used to apply warrants for traffic controls. The results show that warrants for traffic signals and pedestrian hybrid beacons are most likely to be met using weekend peak-hour traffic flows. Most locations that meet warrants already have controls, but site-specific safety investigations may be warranted at 9% of all crossings. Count-based models of bicyclist exposure are estimated for Duluth using origin-destination centrality indices as explanatory variables. Although these indices correlate positively and significantly with bicyclist volumes, estimates of exposure do not correlate with bicycle crashes. Together, these analyses illustrate how measures of bicyclist exposure to risk can be used in assessments of safety and crash risk. The approaches can be used in planning-level studies where consistent measures of exposure or risk are needed. These results underscore the need to continue bicycle traffic monitoring and make available estimates of exposure for safety assessments.
Related research
- Institutionalizing Bicycle and Pedestrian Traffic Counts and Data Collection
- Performance Measures for Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety: Methodologies for Monitoring Traffic Volumes and Assessing Exposure to Risk
- Assessing the Economic Impact and Health Effects of Bicycling in Minnesota
- Traffic Impacts of Bicycle Facilities
- Travel Behavior Over Time
- Implementing Bicycle and Pedestrian Traffic Counts and Data Collection
- Testing and Development of Smartphone Applications for Bicycle Route Tracking - FY12 TechPlan
- Methodologies for Counting Bicyclists and Pedestrians in Minnesota: An Integrated Approach to Measuring and Modeling Non-motorized Traffic
- Understanding Use of Non-Motorized Transportation Facilities - FY10 TechPlan
Project details:
- Project number: 2015026
- Start date: 07/2014
- Project status: Completed
- Research area: Transportation Safety and Traffic Flow
- Topics: Bicycling, Pedestrian, Safety