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  • This video was made possible by Blue Apron.

  • The first 100 people to sign up using the link in the description get three free delicious,

  • fresh meals from Blue Apron.

  • In 2004 the American Highway Users Alliance published an article claiming that the Katy

  • freeway in Houston, Texas was the second most congested road in America.

  • Drivers spent a combined 25.4 million hours every year sitting in traffic on that road.

  • That’s 36 lifetimes worth.

  • It was an absolute embarrassment of a road for Texas so they decided to spend $2.8 billion

  • to expand it to 28 lanes making it the widest highway in the world.

  • All this extra capacity would surely fix the problemmore lanes means more room for more

  • cars which means shorter travel times... right?

  • Unfortunately not.

  • Between 2011 and 2014 alone, travel times on the Katy freeway increased by up to 55%.

  • It now takes an average of 64 minutes to drive the 28 miles between downtown Houston and

  • Katyland during the afternoon rush hour.

  • That’s up from 41 minutes in 2011.

  • The problem with this project was that the solution violated the fundamental law of road

  • congestionmore lanes mean more traffic.

  • This probably seems counterintuitive.

  • The more lanes there are the higher the capacity a road has so cars should be able to drive

  • faster... but that’s a very narrow analysis of the problem.

  • You can’t just think about how this would work on one road, you have to think about

  • it in the context of a whole city.

  • Many people choose not to drive places because of how long it takes.

  • If the traffic is bad, they can take public transit or wait until a less busy time, or

  • just not travel at all.

  • When a road is expanded, travel times initially decrease so all those people who chose not

  • to drive or to take an alternate route or whatever decide to switch to using that newly

  • expanded road.

  • What’s fascinating about roads is that this happens at a perfect 1 to 1 ratio.

  • If the capacity of a road doubles, the amount of people using that road will also double.

  • If it doubles again, the amount will again double.

  • Of course if you kept doing this over and over again you would eventually build a big

  • enough road that there wouldn’t be any more cars to fill the road, but in the real world

  • where demand for roads far outstrips supply, drivers will adjust to any change in road

  • capacity.

  • So does that mean that it’s hopeless?

  • Is there no way to solve traffic?

  • No way to make our roads better and safer and more efficient?

  • Well... no.

  • There’s plenty we can do.

  • Here’s the thing about trafficit slows down exponentially.

  • The 20,000 car on the road slows down traffic overall significantly more than the 5,000

  • car.

  • This is a major driver for a lot of jams—a small addition of cars leads to a large addition

  • in congestionbut it also makes solving traffic a bit easier since you only need to

  • remove a small amount of cars from the road and that’s just what ramp meters do.

  • Ramp meters are set up on the on-ramps of highways to restrict the amount of people

  • getting on the highway.

  • They usually let one car on every five or six seconds.

  • Since the amount of cars actually on the highway is kept down, the highway stays at its most

  • efficient speed.

  • Minnesota did an experiment where they shut down their long-used ramp meters for eight

  • weeks in order to see if they actually worked and they found that the highway capacity decreased

  • by 9%, travel times increased by 22%, speeds dropped by 7%, and crashes increased by 26%.

  • Stockholm, Sweden used that exponential nature of traffic to decrease travel times by up

  • to 40% in 2006.

  • Stockholm as a city lies across 14 islands which means that all the bridges act as huge

  • chokepoints.

  • Traffic, therefore, was historically horrible for the relatively small city.

  • On January 3rd, 2006, Stockholm started to charge drivers who entered this central perimeterthe

  • busiest area.

  • The charge wasn’t muchbetween 10 and 20 krona, the equivalent of 1 and 2 US dollars

  • but it was enough to persuade 20% of drivers to not enter the central perimeter.

  • They either went downtown on public transport or walked or didn’t go at all.

  • These are the amounts of daily drivers in the perimeter in the years leading up to the

  • charge.

  • As soon as the charge was implemented in 2006, the daily amount dropped down to here.

  • It wasn’t a fluke.

  • After the 6 month initial trial period driving in the central core became free again and

  • the amount of daily drivers increased to nearly the level it was before.

  • When the charge became permanent in 2007, daily numbers once again plummeted.

  • Even though the charge was minuscule, it was enough to dissuade 10s of thousands of people

  • from using those roads.

  • There are really two costs of drivingthe money and the time.

  • When the time it takes to drive isn’t enough of a cost to prevent people from driving,

  • these charges increase the overall cost to a level where some people will decide not

  • to drive.

  • But what about safety?

  • Roads are still unbelievably dangerous.

  • In any given year, 1 out of every 10,000 people in the US die in a car accident.

  • Just think about how high of a proportion that is.

  • If you go to a Redskins game at FedEx field near Washington, DC, eight of the people sitting

  • in the stands with you will die in the next year in a car accident.

  • It turns out one of the best ways to prevent accidents is with something youve almost

  • certainly already seen or usedthe roundabout.

  • There’s a reason you see these more and more.

  • Roundabouts reduce deaths and serious injuries by 90%.

  • That is not an error.

  • With roundabouts, there’s almost no opportunity for the worst type of collisionthe head

  • on full speed crash.

  • In a traditional intersection, cars come within feet of each other while going at a relative

  • speed of up to 100 mph.

  • A head-on crash at that speed is undoubtedly catastrophic.

  • With roundabouts, cars naturally slow down to about 15-25 miles per hour since theyre

  • going around a curve.

  • Also, if there were to be a collision, it would either be a side-impact collision if

  • a car failed to turn into the circle or a side-to-side collision if a car misjudged

  • the curve.

  • Both of these collisions happen at a low relative speed so fatalities are low.

  • But what about capacity?

  • Surely the lower-speed roundabouts cause horrible traffic problems.

  • Well... they don’t.

  • A single lane roundabout can handle a maximum of 1800 vehicles per hour which is exactly

  • the same as a traditional two-lane signaled intersection.

  • While cars will move through a signaled intersection at a much higher speed, they have to wait

  • both for the light to change and left-turning cars.

  • With roundabouts, you have a smooth, consistent, albeit slower, flow.

  • So what’s the problem?

  • Why haven’t we replaced every intersection with a roundabout?

  • Well there are disadvantagestheyre more difficult for pedestrians, especially those

  • who are deaf or blind, they require a larger footprint, theyre more expensive to maintainbut

  • the real reason roundabouts are not ubiquitous nowadays is because of the biggest fallacy

  • in road designthat drivers need rules.

  • Poynton, just outside of Manchester, UK, used to have a typical, rather dreary intersection

  • and nobody really liked it.

  • Cars would back up for miles, pedestrians had to wait forever for the light to change,

  • and it essentially split the town apart.

  • So someone had the idea to remove the traffic lights, remove the zebra crossings, the curbs,

  • remove almost every safety device in the intersection and just set up two adjoining roundabouts.

  • Surely this would wreak havoc, but it didn’t.

  • Turns out, when people are uncomfortable, when people aren’t really sure what’s

  • going on, they pay more attention.

  • The green light was a signal to people that the road was clear, that it was safe to speed,

  • that they could let their guard down, but after the change the cars were able to flow

  • freely, albeit at a slow pace, instead of waiting for the lights to change.

  • Pedestrian incidents went down, collisions went down, traffic flowed faster, and the

  • city center finally had some character.

  • So, all around the world cities are replicating what Poynton did.

  • Theyre removing curbs, traffic lights, and pedestrian crossings to make one shared

  • space.

  • All around the world, these streets are resulting in fewer accidents and more pedestrian space.

  • Discomfort is saving lives.

  • On a larger scale, there’s one more innovative intersection design that’s beginning to

  • save livesthe diverging diamond interchange.

  • This interchange is designed as a way to get more cars on and off highways faster.

  • After the on-ramp to the right side, the road crosses over so cars never have to traverse

  • active lanes to get onto the highway.

  • A car heading north can effortlessly join the on-ramp without crossing traffic, and

  • a car heading south will cross over so it drives on the left side and can effortlessly

  • join the on-ramp to head south.

  • Not only is this easier for drivers, it improves safety.

  • The dangerousness of an intersection is often rated by determining the number of conflict

  • pointspossible points where accidents could happen under normal circumstances.

  • With a traditional on-ramp intersection there are 26.

  • With a diverging diamond intersection, only 14.

  • And theyre faster too.

  • The US Department of Transportation found in a study that universally, whether the traffic

  • was light or heavy, diverging diamond interchanges let more cars through faster.

  • It costs less too.

  • A traditional on-ramp intersection requires $11.3 million to build; a diverging diamond

  • intersection, only $5.7 million.

  • There are really no major disadvantages to this intersection so nearly 100 of them have

  • been built to date and more and more are being installed each month.

  • As good as these solutions sound, there’s no one way to solve traffic.

  • The difference between cities with chronic traffic problems and those without is a combination

  • of smart policies and designs that mitigate the effects of having more road demand than

  • supply.

  • But traffic won’t just fix itself so until cities at least experiment with solutions

  • were all condemned to traffic, forever.

  • This video was made possible by Blue Apron.

  • Fixing traffic is all about saving time and improving the environment and so is Blue Apron.

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  • Blue Apron sent me a box to try out and it was a fantastic meal.

  • Youre shipped the exact amount of everything you need so you don’t have do any measuring.

  • Not only does this save time, it also minimizes food waste.

  • They give you these clear, concise instructions so even the least experienced chefs can work

  • with their recipes.

  • So here’s the meal I made.

  • It was healthy, quick, filling, and delicious and the good news is that you can get a meal

  • just like this for free.

  • Blue Apron is offering the first 100 Wendover Productions viewers that sign up with the

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  • Not only will signing up support Wendover Productions, youll also get a chance to

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  • Aside from that, please be sure to check out my podcast Showmakers and subscribe to this

  • channel to get all my future videos right when they come out.

  • Thanks again for watching and I’ll see you in two weeks for another Wendover Productions

  • video.

This video was made possible by Blue Apron.

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