Actually according to the Mass Vehicle code you can take a right on red even with an arrow as long as there isn't a no turn on red sign.
Also on a one way road intersecting another one way road you can take a left on red. I wish more drivers would figure that one out.
How do they assume that? Do they give out licenses to people who can't drive?
I'm looking at what's coming before i move into the path of a possible bike.
btw, some of these crazies on bikes would do themselves a solid by not blasting through intersections.
All those 'no turn on red's' accomplish is jam up traffic.
All those 'no turn on red's' accomplish is jam up traffic.
All those 'no turn on red's' accomplish is jam up traffic.
Aside from pedestrian protection, which I don't think requires any additional explanation, "no turn on red" is actually a very effective protection against gridlock. I mean literal gridlock - when cars wedge themselves into intersections that they cannot clear, get trapped, and thus obstruct cars from moving on the next light phase.
It might also be possible to reconfigure the plaza to provide a separated right turn lane from Somerville Ave to Mass Ave on a more direct path sort of like how the Wilson Sq right turn from Somerville Ave to Elm St works (but probably without copying Wilson Sq's parking). It might also make sense to move the 83 bus stop into that area.
A pair of new traffic lights that have loomed over Massachusetts Avenue in Lexington for months will soon be turned on.
Reconstruction of a stretch of road along Massachusetts Avenue - the project of which the lights were a part - is entering its final stages and is projected to be completed on schedule and slightly under budget, according to MassDOT.
The project, which encompasses roadway from Marrett Road to Pleasant Street, is aimed to improving safety conditions at three intersections in the area. It included consolidating some uncontrolled mid-block crosswalks, improving bus stops and providing bicycle accommodations, according to MassDOT’s website. The project is scheduled to be completed in late fall, and is projected to cost about $4.2 million, Victoria Mier, communications assistant for MassDOT said in an email. The project’s original budget was $4.5 million.
Sidewalks still to come
Construction is currently being done on sidewalks on Marrett Road and on Massachusetts Avenue eastbound from Marrett Road to Maple Street, Mier said.
“The primary work items that remain include the installation of the remaining sidewalks, landscaping, activation of new traffic signal systems, and miscellaneous clean-up items,” Mier said on July 6.
Ross Morrow, Lexington’s assistant town engineer, said the project is about 75 percent finished.
“I think they’ve got quite a solid bit of concrete work to do,” Morrow said. “I would say the majority of this month will be pouring concrete sidewalks and driveways.”
Right now the sidewalks are essentially a “gravel walk area” and has been “for a while now,” Morrow said.
“It will be nice to get the concrete back in place,” Morrow said. “We’re dealing with it the best we can.”
One traffic light remaining
Along with new sidewalks, the project also includes two new traffic signals on Maple and Pleasant Streets, Morrow said.
“It’s in Eversource’s hands right now,” Morrow said.
Michael Durand, a spokesman for Eversource, said the work is expected to be completed soon.
“We connected one set at Maple (Street) and Mass. Ave. We have one other set to connect, pending the wiring inspection,” Durand said on July 10.
Morrow said the project is still on schedule to be completed by late October.
“That includes all sorts of cleanup,” Morrow said. “Once everything’s in place and active, the contractor will still have to go through (and) clean out the catch basins and do final seeding of any disturbed areas, stuff like that.”
On the downside, apparently they hired a highway engineer because the turning radii they put in could handle a semi truck at 85mph. WTF
Hi, Professional Traffic Engineer here.
God forbid an engineer design geometric improvements in order to accommodate a WB-series truck for a design speed of 30 or 35 MPH for roadway intersections that are not 90 degrees and such that the truck will not encroach into the opposite lanes, thus avoiding a potential collision situation.
Sounds like you are behind on your PE credits because this is incredibly outdated.
No, a truck does not need to move at 35mph to make a turn, especially from a residential street where the only larger vehicles that will show up are for a construction project.
And it is absolutely fine for a truck to encroach into the opposite lane when it is such an uncommon movement.
If an intersection sees 2,000 movements an hour, you do not design for something that happens .01 times an hour.
This isnt an interstate off-ramp, it is a turn onto a low-density residential roadway, adjacent to a popular multi-use trail.
Rather than try to insult my intelligence and use fictional numbers to make an argument, I'm going to use real numbers by looking at the cover sheet of the design plan set and focusing on the "T" column. That's your percentage of trucks as part of the overall daily and peak traffic volumes.
For Mass Ave. and Pleasant Street (routes 4 & 225), both principal arterials and Maple Street (route 2A), a minor arterial that collective carry the bulk of the traffic volume, the percentage of trucks varies between 3.6% and 4.6% during the peak hour and 4.2% to 7.5% on an average day. Those are fairly high numbers for those classifications of roadways to begin with and you're dealing with an urban (developed and relatively constrained) area on top of that. So, for those 3.6 percent of trucks (let's go low end) that use Mass Ave. during the peak hour, encroachment is a huge deal.
Truck volumes play a big part in dictating geometry and pavement design.
Far too many times, we read about trucks that hop corners and/or ride up on curves and injure pedestrians and bicyclists. It is our responsibility to make sure we use the compiled data to design a safe intersection, guided by AASHTO and MassDOT guidelines. Failure to do so opens us up to immense liability.
All fine and good until a truck right hooks and kills someone (again).
Pleasant gets higher truck volumes because it is a direct connection between Route 2 and a commercial area on Mass Ave.
Maple does not connect to anything that you wouldnt be better off arriving to from a different direction if you are a truck. You should not design for a use that is incompatible with the roadway and neighborhood because some truck driver wants to take an off-map shortcut using an inappropriate vehicle.
There are many choices that can be made. A sweeping turning radius is the easiest way to accommodate trucks, but does so at the expense of all other users.
You can accommodate the turns by setting the stop bar back.
You can also simply ban larger trucks from making the turn, and send them to a more appropriate roadway. If a truck is riding up onto the sidewalk than the driver need their license removed. They should be on a truck route or in an appropriate vehicle.
I'm fascinated by the philosophical differences between the traffic engineer in Somerville and the traffic engineer with the pseudonym "North Shore."