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  2. CROW Design Manual for Bicycle Traffic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CROW_Design_Manual_for...

    Dutch roundabout. CROW Design Manual for Bicycle Traffic is a publication on bicycle transportation planning and engineering in the Netherlands.It is published by CROW, a non-profit agency advising Directorate-General for Public Works and Water Management formerly Ministry of Transport and Water Management (Netherlands).

  3. Bicycle transportation planning and engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_transportation...

    Some examples of the types of bikeways under the purview of bicycle transportation engineers include partially segregated infrastructure in-road such as bike lanes, buffered bike lanes; physically segregated in-road such as cycle tracks; bike paths with their own right-of-way; and shared facilities such as bicycle boulevards, shared lane ...

  4. Traffic engineering (transportation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_engineering...

    However, dynamic elements are now being introduced into road traffic management. Dynamic elements have long been used in rail transport. These include sensors to measure traffic flows and automatic, interconnected, guidance systems to manage traffic (for example, traffic signs which open a lane in different directions depending on the time of day).

  5. Cycling infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycling_infrastructure

    A bike lane with some form of buffer between motor traffic and the cycle lane. Buffered bike lane in Manhattan, New York: Lightly segregated: A bike lane with separating features such as wands or orcas. Light segregation on a cycle lane in Berlin: Contraflow: A bike lane which allows cyclists to go against the flow of a one-way street.

  6. Bicycle Master Plan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_Master_Plan

    A Bicycle Master Plan is a published development plan describing long-range objectives for developing bicycle infrastructure in a city or region. It may include bicycle paths, protected bicycle lanes , bicycle parking, and integration with public transit [ 1 ] as ways to promote bicycling as a viable transportation option.

  7. Pop-up bicycle lane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pop-up_bicycle_lane

    A pop up cycle lane installed in Berlin during the COVID-19 pandemic in spring 2020 COVID-19 pop-up cycle lane in Chichester, England, August 2020. A pop-up bicycle lane (also known as a pop-up cycle path or corona cycle path) [1] is a temporary bike lane that is used to test, pilot or trial new infrastructure to improve conditions for people riding bicycles.

  8. Shared lane marking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shared_lane_marking

    The original "bike in a house" or "man jumping barrels at home" marking was developed by James Mackay and included in the 1993 Denver Bicycle Master Plan. [3] While Mackay had considered a "connect the dots" pavement markings approach for bicycle route definition and cyclist lane positioning reinforcement (during his time as the Bicycle Facilities Engineer for the North Carolina Department of ...

  9. Contraflow lane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contraflow_lane

    In transport engineering nomenclature, a counterflow lane or contraflow lane is a lane in which traffic flows in the opposite direction of the surrounding lanes. Contraflow lanes are often used for bicycles or bus rapid transit on what are otherwise one-way streets. In a sample configuration for buses, a street might have four lanes: the ...