Curb extension Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
and black posts on the left]]A curb extension (or kerb extension or bulb-out) is a traffic calming measure, intended to slow the speed of traffic and increase driver awareness, particularly in built-up and residential neighbourhoods.
A curb extension comprises an angled narrowing of the roadway and a commensurate widening of the sidewalk. This is often accompanied by an area of exhanced restrictions (such as a "no stopping" or "no parking" zone) and the appropriate visual reenforcement. This is achieved using painted road markings (lines, coloured areas, chevrons), barriers, bollards, or the addition of pavement or street furniture (planters, lamp standards, or benches).
Curb extensions are often used in combination with other traffic calming measures like chicanes, speed bumps, or rumblestrips, and are frequently sited to "guard" pedestrian crossings. In these cases the "squeeze" effect of the narrowed roadway shortens the exposed distance pedestrians must walk.
Curb extensions can pose a hazard to cyclists, as they force cyclists from their position at the road side (or in a roadside bikelane) into the (already narrowed) gap. Consequently, many curb extensions are built with the bikelane passing through (making the extension an island, separated from the main sidewalk by a narrow bikelane).
Curb extensions are also used in a number of special circumstances:
- To provide additional horizontal space to allow retrofitting of existing sidewalks with ramps, where the sidewalk would otherwise be too narrow.
- To provide additional protection for pedestrians (particularly children) when leaving premises. The curb extension contains a pedestrian barrier, prevending pedestrians from running straight from the premises over the road.
- In combination with a controlled urban parking scheme, where parking spaces are shielded from oncoming traffic by the extended sidewalk element.
- At a four-way (signalled) intersection, to slow and calm traffic, particularly fast traffic turning from a major to a minor road.
- To protect passengers embarking and particularly disembarking from trams, buses, and level-grade urban lightrail systems, particularly when retrofitting existing streets.
To facilitate street sweeping, the internal and external curvatures of the extended curb section are moderately graduated.
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