kcantor
Senior Member
^
While actual free flow - particularly in both directions - is likely not achievable except perhaps for short stretches, weather and road conditions and accidents etc. are ongoing variables that also make it harder to achieve. What can likely be done however is to plan for “half cycle” delays and to use much shorter cycles than Edmonton currently imposes. It’s one thing to wait 20 seconds for a light to change, it’s quite another to wait 90 seconds and that’s even worse for pedestrians who have much shorter “walk times” vs wait times as they need to wait through the full cross street cycle as well as their own “don’t walk” cycle.
While actual free flow - particularly in both directions - is likely not achievable except perhaps for short stretches, weather and road conditions and accidents etc. are ongoing variables that also make it harder to achieve. What can likely be done however is to plan for “half cycle” delays and to use much shorter cycles than Edmonton currently imposes. It’s one thing to wait 20 seconds for a light to change, it’s quite another to wait 90 seconds and that’s even worse for pedestrians who have much shorter “walk times” vs wait times as they need to wait through the full cross street cycle as well as their own “don’t walk” cycle.




