Santa Fe New Mexican

Saving the environmen­t, one roundabout at a time

On top of safety benefits, circular traffic features reduce emissions

- By Cara Buckley

ICARMEL, Ind. t’s getting harder and harder to run a stoplight here because there are fewer and fewer of them around. Every year, at intersecti­ons throughout this thriving city, traffic lights and stop signs have disappeare­d, replaced with roundabout­s.

Lots and lots of roundabout­s.

There is a roundabout decorated with the local high school mascot, a greyhound, and another with giant steel flowers. A 3-mile stretch of Carmel’s Main Street has 11 roundabout­s alone. The roundabout that locals perhaps prize the most features box hedges and a three-tier bronze fountain made in France. In 2016, it was named “Internatio­nal Roundabout of the Year” by no less than the U.K. Roundabout Appreciati­on Society, which, according to the Carmel mayor, Jim Brainard, is largely made up of “three guys in a pub.” (Their actual membership is six. But, still.)

Carmel, a city of 102,000 north of Indianapol­is, has 140 roundabout­s, with more than a dozen still to come. No U.S. city has more. The main reason is safety; compared with regular intersecti­ons, roundabout­s significan­tly reduce injuries and deaths.

But there’s also a climate benefit. Because modern roundabout­s don’t have red lights where cars sit and idle, they don’t burn as much gasoline. While there are few studies, the former city engineer for Carmel, Mike McBride, estimates each roundabout saves about 20,000 gallons of fuel annually, which means the cars of Carmel emit many fewer tons of planet-heating carbon emissions each year. And U.S. highway officials broadly agree roundabout­s reduce tailpipe emissions.

They also don’t need electricit­y, and, unlike stoplights, keep functionin­g after bad storms — a bonus in these meteorolog­ically turbulent times.

“Modern roundabout­s are the most sustainabl­e and resilient intersecti­ons around,” said Ken Sides, chairman of the roundabout committee at the Institute of Transporta­tion Engineers.

The reason that Carmel has so many roundabout­s is Brainard, the city’s seven-term Republican mayor.

Brainard first encountere­d roundabout­s in the 1980s, when he studied at the University of Oxford and became taken with European traffic flow. After getting elected mayor in 1995, he asked a consultant to look into building a roundabout in Carmel. The consultant refused, saying they were dangerous and pointing to an effort in Massachuse­tts to remove them.

But Brainard discovered that the consultant was confusing roundabout­s with rotaries, or large traffic circles, which are bigger, arguably scarier and include Dupont Circle in Washington, D.C., and Place Charles de Gaulle, the multilane beast around the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

Modern roundabout­s, by comparison, are compact, with lower speed limits, traffic yields rather than stops and generally fewer lanes. Unlike traffic circles where cars enter at 90-degree angles, traffic flows into modern roundabout­s at a smaller angle, drasticall­y cutting the chances of getting T-boned. Well-designed ones are also more friendly to pedestrian­s and cyclists. In 1997, Brainard oversaw the building of a roundabout on the city’s outskirts and added another two the following year. Locals, initially skeptical, warmed to them: They alleviated rush hour backlogs and stops. Within a decade, the city had close to 50 and doubled the number again over the next 10 years.

“Now we can’t live without them,” said Becky Blystone, a preschool teacher who also works at All Things Carmel, a souvenir shop on Main Street that sells roundabout-themed tchotchkes like drink cozies and playing cards.

Outsiders took notice. In 2011, CNN did a segment, and the Internatio­nal Roundabout Conference came to town.

The city fanned the hype, issuing publicatio­ns like Roundabout Carmel: Highlighti­ng City of Carmel Roundabout­s from 1997 to 2010 (it features a “dogbone” shaped roundabout highway interchang­e dubbed the greenest in the country) and a glossy coffee table book, written by Brainard, called Carmel: ’Round about Right. It also celebrates National Roundabout­s Week, which this year included trivia nights and Wear Your Roundabout Shirt to Work Day.

“People love them here,” Brainard said during a recent tour of Carmel in his hybrid Ford Escape. “You couldn’t take one out.” Not everyone is a fan.

“I hate them,” said Corey Hill, a call center director from nearby Avon who said he often gets stuck behind confused out-of-towners.

Having greener intersecti­ons dovetails with Brainard’s climate mitigation efforts. He was among the thousands of leaders who pledged to uphold the Paris climate agreement when former President Donald Trump announced the U.S. pullout in 2017. Carmel’s city vehicles are either hybrid or run by biofuels, green spaces sown with native plants have exploded in number and size, and solar panels help fuel the city’s water treatment and sewage plants. Under Brainard’s watch, the city has also added bike paths, taken out traffic lanes, widened sidewalks and increased walkabilit­y, all in an effort to get people out of their cars.

“We need to do everything we can about carbon emissions and the climate change issue,” Brainard said.

Carbon emissions per roundabout are highly dependent on location, constructi­on, volume and time of day: A study of two roundabout­s in Mississipp­i found a 56 percent decrease in carbon dioxide emissions; another calculated cumulative decreases at six roundabout­s of between 16 percent to 59 percent. Carmel’s estimates are just that — the city engineer used calculatio­ns based on a study from Virginia. But overall, the Federal Highway Administra­tion has found roundabout­s cause fewer emissions compared with signalized intersecti­ons and said the difference can be “significan­t.”

Andrea Bill, associate director of the Traffic Operations and Safety Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said roundabout­s sometimes led to more fender-benders and sideswipes but saved people from paying a greater price.

“The thing I say to people is ‘Would you prefer an ambulance or tow truck?’ ” Bill said. “Most people would say a tow truck.”

 ?? AJ MAST/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mayor Jim Brainard stands in October at the Hoagy Carmichael Roundabout in Carmel., Ind., which has 140 roundabout­s. ‘People love them here,’ he said. ‘You couldn’t take one out.’
AJ MAST/NEW YORK TIMES Mayor Jim Brainard stands in October at the Hoagy Carmichael Roundabout in Carmel., Ind., which has 140 roundabout­s. ‘People love them here,’ he said. ‘You couldn’t take one out.’

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