|
Ecoluminance: LRC Develops New Method to Light Roundabouts
Roundabouts, also known as traffic circles, are increasing
in number across the U.S. These intersections generally
increase traffic throughput while reducing the severity of
automobile accidents. However, as relatively new traffic
features, modern roundabouts are sometimes described as
confusing for drivers. One difference between roundabouts and
conventional cross-type intersections is the location of
pedestrian crosswalks. Drivers may be less familiar with the
location of crosswalks when driving through a roundabout.
The Lighting Research Center
(LRC) at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has developed a
concept for roadway illumination called "Ecoluminance" which
incorporates roadside vegetation with low-level pedestrian and
landscape lighting, retroreflective markers, and light-emitting
diode (LED) road and walkway illumination.
In a study sponsored jointly by the New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) and by the New
York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT), the LRC
designed, installed and evaluated new lighting approaches in
real-world conditions. Senior Research Scientist John Bullough
and LRC Director Mark Rea were the principal investigators for
the study.
“Ecoluminance uses a combination of lighting and vegetation
to provide visual delineation, illumination for important
safety hazards and concerns, and cues about road geometry,”
said Bullough.
The ecoluminance concept was implemented at a roundabout in
the Town of Bethlehem in Albany County, New York with
cooperation from the Town Board and the Public Works, Highway,
Planning, and Police Departments. Researchers from the State
University of New York College of Environmental Science and
Forestry also assisted with the study, and companies General
Electric Lighting, Forms + Surfaces and Lightspec Albany
donated luminaires to the project.
During two preliminary demonstrations during the summer of
2011, the LRC installed lights and vegetation and obtained
feedback from NYSERDA and NYSDOT engineers as well as from town
officials and the Town of Bethlehem Bicycle and Pedestrian
Committee. Based on this feedback, the LRC installed vegetation
and retroreflective markers in the central island of the
roundabout, LED landscape lighting to illuminate vegetation and
trees, bollards at crosswalks, and LED overhead lighting along
sidewalks and the road during the summer of 2012. Roadway edges
and pedestrians were more visible than under the conventional
lighting, and vehicles approached the roundabout with similar
or slightly lower speeds.
Traditional lighting for roundabouts consists of a
relatively large number of pole-mounted overhead luminaires,
which are relatively expensive to operate because they are
energy intensive. The LRC estimates that the initial cost of
the ecoluminance system is similar to that of conventional
lighting, but the energy use is only about a fourth, resulting
in substantially lower energy costs as well as substantially
lower light pollution impacts. "The ecoluminance concept could
allow transportation agencies to integrate vegetation and
lighting while reducing costs and environmental impacts," said
Rea.
The LRC's report is available online at:
https://www.dot.ny.gov/divisions/engineering/technical-services/trans-r-and-d-repository/C-08-03FinalReport-Project18233-C0803.pdf
|
Published
November 26,
2012 |
Contact: Rebekah Mullaney
Phone: (518) 687-7118
E-mail: mullar2@rpi.edu |
|