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U.S. Department of Transportation U.S. Department of Transportation Icon United States Department of Transportation United States Department of Transportation
FHWA Highway Safety Programs

Lesson 5: Pedestrian Facility Design Course

Comment:
This course is designed to provide information and application opportunities for those involved in the Design of pedestrian facilities. Lesson 5 Midblock Crossing – The course participants will: understand where Midblock Crossing are appropriate on roadways;and know how to improve the safety and convenience of midblock pedestrian crossings. Participants will be able to list or describe the following:11. Describe where Midblock Crossing can be most effective, 12. Provide examples of treatments that enhance Midblock Crossing 13. List two new treatments allowed for in the MUTCD

Last Updated (Year): 2016

Year Produced: 2001

Abstract:

COURSE DESCRIPTION: To emphasize the importance of planning for pedestrians, the course focuses on case examples involving corridor and intersection design issues. Participants are engaged through lecture, discussion, video demonstrations of problem areas in corridors and intersections, small group problem identification, and the development of design alternatives. This training was developed to provide information and application opportunities to those involved in the design of pedestrian facilities. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires newly constructed and altered sidewalks to be accessible and usable by people with disabilities, and accessibility improvements need to be implemented for existing facilities.
OUTCOMES: Upon completion of the course, participants will be able to: List the characteristics of pedestrians and motorized traffic that influence pedestrian facility design;Apply the concepts of universal design and applicable design reference material to redesigning an existing location and/or designing a new location that meets the needs of motorized and nonmotorized users;Given a case example, identify potential conflicts between pedestrians and other traffic and propose design options that improve access and safety;Given a case example, analyze the network for improvement options to meet the needs of pedestrian and other traffic.
TARGET AUDIENCE: Engineers with planning, design, construction, or maintenance responsibilities;pedestrian and bicycle specialists, disability and orientation specialists, transportation planners, architects, landscape architects, as well as decisionmakers at the project planning level.

For:Walking

The E's:Engineering

Ped Bike Activity:

  • Planning

Ped Bike Topic:

  • Planning
  • Facility Design
  • Design

Facility Type:Midblock Crossing

Resource Type:

  • Information

Link to Content Source:

Pedestrian Facility Design Course