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Search Results "Pedestrian Walkway"
Commonly Searched Documents
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R209.1 General
Where pedestrian signals are provided at pedestrian street crossings, they shall include accessible pedestrian signals and pedestrian pushbuttons complying with sections 4E.08 through 4E...
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R305.2.4 Pedestrian Refuge Islands
R305.2.4 Pedestrian Refuge Islands....
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11B-703.7.2.7 Pedestrian traffic-control buttons
11B-703.7.2.7 Pedestrian traffic-control buttons....
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R205 Alternate Pedestrian Access Routes (Section-by-Section Analysis)
R205 Alternate Pedestrian Access Routes (Section-by-Section Analysis) Alternate pedestrian access routes must be provided when a pedestrian circulation path is temporarily closed by construction...
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Separate Pathways for Pedestrians and Bicyclists
safety risk to blind or visually impaired pedestrians unless there is a clear separation between pedestrians and other motorized and non-motorized vehicles including bicyclists.’’...
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R302 Pedestrian Access Routes (Section-by-Section Analysis)
R302 Pedestrian Access Routes (Section-by-Section Analysis)...
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68.10(19) Pedestrian Access Route
(19) Pedestrian Access Route--A continuous and unobstructed path of travel provided for pedestrians with disabilities within or coinciding with a pedestrian circulation path....
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11B-703.7.2.7 Pedestrian traffic-control buttons
Pole-supported pedestrian traffic-control buttons shall be identified with color coding consisting of a textured horizontal yellow band 2 inches (51 mm) in width encircling the pole, and...
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11B-703.7.2.7 Pedestrian traffic-control buttons
Pole-supported pedestrian traffic-control buttons shall be identified with color coding consisting of a textured horizontal yellow band 2 inches (51 mm) in width encircling the pole, and...
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Issue 2: Location relative to the crosswalk
Pedestrians who are blind may stand beside the pushbutton while waiting to cross, particularly if they use the vibrotactile indication....
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Issue 1: APS volume
This can lead to neighborhood as well as user concerns, since excessive volume will mask other sounds that are important to pedestrians who are blind (such as the sound of traffic surges...
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R303 Alternate Pedestrian Access Routes (See R205) (Section-by-Section Analysis)
R303 Alternate Pedestrian Access Routes (See R205) (Section-by-Section Analysis) In the 2005 draft of the proposed guidelines, the technical requirements for alternate pedestrian access...
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Issue 4: Wrong pole! …Wrong message!
This will allow pedestrians to push the button and then hear the APS at the crosswalk departure point....
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Common Problems Arising in the Installation of Accessible Pedestrian Signals
of accessible pedestrian signals (APS)....
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1012.3 Opening limitations
Open guards shall have balusters or ornamental patterns such that a 4-inch-diameter (102 mm) sphere cannot pass through any opening up to a height of 34 inches (864 mm). From a...
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Pushbutton locator tone
locator tone The pushbutton locator tone is a low-volume tick or tone that repeats constantly, at one-second intervals, during the flashing and steady DON’T WALK intervals to advise pedestrians...
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Location
Source: NCHRP Web Only Document 117-A, Accessible Pedestrian Signals: A Guide to Best Practice, Figure 6-8 Figure 4: Installation of APS on two separated poles, aligned with crosswalk...
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Q8: Curb Ramp Replaced as Part of a Resurfacing Alteration and Adjacent Sidewalk
The Joint Technical Assistance addresses those requirements that are triggered when a public entity alters a roadway where the roadway intersects a street level pedestrian walkway (28 CFR...
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Issue 8: Rest-in-WALK (quiet time ok)
Issue 8: Rest-in-WALK (quiet time ok) In some locations, the pedestrian signals ‘rest-in-WALK’ and it may not be desirable to have the WALK indication repeat constantly during the long...
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Synthesis of Literature Relevant to Roundabout Signalization to Provide Pedestrian Access - Final Report
Prepared by: Vaughan W. Inman Science Applications International Corporation and Gregory W. Davis Federal Highway Administration, RD&T 6300 Georgetown...
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1. Access Barrier Removal in Existing Pedestrian Facilities
Access Barrier Removal in Existing Pedestrian Facilities The Settlement Agreement requires the City to spend approximately $1.37 billion over the next thirty (30) years to implement...
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R209.2 Alterations
Existing pedestrian signals shall comply with R209.1 when the signal controller and software are altered, or the signal head is replaced....
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Issue 3: Which signal? Speech WALK messages necessary
Pedestrians standing at one crosswalk could mistake the message of the other crosswalk for their indication to begin crossing....