Nuvolari_the_legend wrote:I'm trying to find out how to reduce traffic jams (in Holland but I think that this problem is everywhere the same). I'm doing it with two others and I'm competing against a lot of other groups, all secondary school pupils. The group whit the best idea wins 2.500 euro.
Because I don't drive a car and because I'm only 15, I don't really have experience with traffic jams. If you could help me with some ideas and answers, that would be grate.
Some questions:
1. How does a traffic jam actually start?
2. Why is the trafic not able to move faste. I mean when the people at the front drive faster, everybody could?
3. Why get some lanes closed en why is it not one but sometimes two or even more?
A solution I was thinking of was: A road white four lanes (at least). The two on the right have a minimum speed of 85 km/h and a top speed of 105 km/h. These two are for slower traffic and trucks. The two on the left have a minimum speed of 105 km/h and a top speed of 130 km/h. These two are for faster traffic.
All help is welcome.
so you want us to do all the work and cash the 2500 without doing anything yourself? doesn't work like that, that's not a project. you do your own research and analysis and based upon that you figure out a possibility.
don't expect to find a fix because the entire country has that problem and it's been like that for ages, and so it has been in many other countries aswell.
the above japenese test shows the problem. for no apparent reason traffic jams occur. one can only guess for a reason, and it probably is simply one person that loses attention or focus that'll create a domino effect that can't be fixed because other cars will not respond adequately.
various drive lane speeds will not do anything, it'll make things more dangerous and only cause accidents and slows traffic coming up behind when a car wants to speed up to another drivelane.
the real problem of traffic jams in the Netherlands is because people are ignorant and only occupied with themselves and that's why traffic jams only occur at on-and off sections on highways when cars sort out or sort in. nobody wants to give, others just jump lane without paying attention to the rest and that's the problem. everybody is too selfish in their driving.
interestingly, in germany and belgium these problems don't exist in such extreme manner as in the netherlands.
traffic flow is regulated in Nl's in some sections like delft, rotterdam, etc. by traffic lights which will allow cars one by one access to the freeway.
traffic jams occur mostly because people don't think. they want to drive on the outer lane then their exit pops up and they'll swerve right and vise versa. if one person would do this, there wouldn't be a problem, but everybody's doing the same, and everybody wants to stay at home at the last moment and haste to their destination.
in addition, the complete metropolitan infrastructure doesn't help. commuters go from city centre to city centre just for desk jobs. if offices were built solely in parks alongside freeways and easily reachable through public transport, it would save a lot of traffic.
you can't stop traffic jams, you can only find solutions to return flow when traffic jams occur.