The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Seeing green in Costa Rica — on a timer. Could it work in Atlanta?

- Doug Turnbull Gridlock Guy

I’ve been blessed with incredible opportunit­ies to travel the world. And when I’ve gotten to see Italy, Aruba, Great Britain, Turkey, France, the Netherland­s, Spain, and Morocco in recent years, I’ve always tried to observe how traffic flows, how people drive, and how road systems work.

I don’t normally experience another country behind the wheel, and my recent mission trip to Costa Rica was no different. For my entire weeklong excursion to San Jose, my commute to our volunteer site has been as a passenger on a small bus. My group and I also took about an hour as pedestrian­s in the downtown area. But I did observe one thing noticeably different in San Jose than Atlanta.

Some traffic signals on main drags in Costa Rica’s capital have timers or warning flashes on the green lights. These impulses work as a “yellow before the yellow.”

As the green cycle nears an end, some lights state how many seconds remain inside the bulb itself. The numbers easily display for motorists and countdown from 30, before the light turns yellow. Other signals simply have the green light flash as a warning before the yellow.

A local motorist told me that these dynamic green lights are a relatively new feature. San Jose added them only in the last couple of years and only in bigger intersecti­ons. Absent my normal contacts and tools I would have in Atlanta, I don’t have as much empirical data to share about these lights’ success in San Jose. But I think they would be a good addition in Atlanta.

Major Metro Atlanta intersecti­ons often have problems with people blocking the box — i.e., staying stopped in the middle of an intersecti­on when a signal turns red. A potential green-light timer or warning could give people some more leeway or margins for error when attempting to squeeze across to the other side. Of course, that could backfire and give people even more confidence to pull off an inconsider­ate move.

Green-light timers could also give motorists the same satisfacti­on — or dread — as trip times give. If someone is waiting through a long traffic light, they can at least gauge if they are going to make it past. A timer could even tip motorists off more specifical­ly as to when a light is mistimed.

We already have plenty of experience with warning lights and timers as pedestrian­s. Many crosswalks tell those crossing the street exactly how much time they have to do it. And people plan on “going for it” accordingl­y. Can they make their way across in 5 seconds? Maybe not. But in 15 or 20 seconds? Speed walk and give it a shot.

Green-light timers and warnings aren’t revolution­ary enough to warrant replacing good, working traffic signals. But they definitely are worth studying and exploring for when municipali­ties replace older signals.

They actually could decrease the amount of blocking in intersecti­ons or, at the very least, give drivers a little more peace of mind about when they will advance.

Thanks to Costa Rica for the inspiratio­n. Pura vida.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY DOUG TURNBULL ?? Some green lights at big intersecti­ons in San Jose, Costa Rica, have timers that signal drivers before they turn yellow. The green lights might flash or have countdown timers.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY DOUG TURNBULL Some green lights at big intersecti­ons in San Jose, Costa Rica, have timers that signal drivers before they turn yellow. The green lights might flash or have countdown timers.
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