Underseer
Contributor
You've probably read about these things. More and more city planners in Europe are converting intersections to "shared space," which means stripping out all street signs, street lights, etc. Counterintuitively, many people freak out, slow down, and pay more attention, which results in fewer accidents while maintaining decent traffic throughput.
As the video mentions, there is some concern that these intersections make things worse for certain disabled people.
My concern is something else: what happens after people get used to intersections like this? At the moment, these intersections work because of fear. Fear causes people to become more cautious, slow down, and pay more attention. Right now these intersections are novel, but what happens after people get used to these things? Wouldn't they become less afraid? Couldn't familiarity reduce the safety advantage of shared space intersections?
Anyway, what do you guys think? Is this the wave of the future?