Your photo shows the gutter (rather than a curb) that I was describing in my last post.In and around Bellingham, most of the roundabouts actually make sense, and they have "sensible foliage." Several years ago, they put one of the first ones in a couple of blocks from my gf's house, which had been a nightmare intersection as I-5 is right there on the north as well as a major N-S road and it took ages to cross or turn due to the constant flow of traffic. I remember we were so relieved that we saluted the road crew one day as they were finishing it.
![]()
There are in fact TWO roundabouts there, one on each side of I-5. The one in the pic is on the south side.
But now they're putting one in in a residential neighbourhood nearby - and completely bolloxing up the traffic - and we can't for the life of us figure out what possible benefit it will provide as the intersection seems quite well served by the traffic lights there. Guess we'll see in a month or two.
This lunacy is sprouting up all over.
The Kids With Crayons, formally known as road engineers, have graduated from college and are getting jobs in the design centers catering to the urban development crowd.
They don't live in the areas and definitely don't drive these roads.
What makes it doubly bad is the new beautification folks (former flower children?) think that the centers of these need plenty of foliage, piled high.
Doesn't matter you can't see what is coming at you so long as it is beautiful.
One advantage, though, is that if you're not sure which exit to take, you can keep going around and around and around until you come to a decision. BTDTThat gives me a flashback to when I approached a roundabout in England to find the road number I was looking for wasn't on any of the signs. It had been last time I'd been there about a year before. I circled the roundabout yelling, "Where the A6 gone?" much to the amusement of my girlfriend. I dove off at the exit that looked right and was rewarded after about 500 yards with a sign that read "A1081 (was A6)". Renumbering roads to direct you where they think is better is a major hobby of highway 'planners' in England.
Yeah roundabouts are sprouting up here about as fast as dandelions. One of the local intersections in town is on a US route that is the POSTED designated truck route. Unfortunately some genius engineer got involved and made the roundabout's radius TOO TIGHT for semi trucks to make it around the roundabout without the rear axles of the truck riding up onto the interior planter walls. Frickin' idiots.
Yeah, the roundabouts are going in everywhere here in Spokane too.
In a lot of cases they really improve traffic flow, and even safety, through an intersection - as long as people know how to use them.
Then you get the idiot who is afraid to enter the roundabout if there are ANY cars ANYWHERE in the circle.
Or the other idiot that doesn't know when to yield and just barges in cutting other people off.![]()
Too true here. I've noticed an alarming amount of scrapes and black tire marks on the curbing of the roundabout centers.
I'm sure I missed some earlier very interesting conversations where I could have learned some new profanities.
They put in a roundabout here....my wife got lost and almost ran out of gas.Yeah, the roundabouts are going in everywhere here in Spokane too.
In a lot of cases they really improve traffic flow, and even safety, through an intersection - as long as people know how to use them.
Then you get the idiot who is afraid to enter the roundabout if there are ANY cars ANYWHERE in the circle.
Or the other idiot that doesn't know when to yield and just barges in cutting other people off.![]()
They put in a roundabout here....my wife got lost and almost ran out of gas.