The Pedestrian Safety Improvement Program is an effort of the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) to identify and address problems with regard to pedestrian safety in California, with the long-term goal of substantially reducing pedestrian fatalities and injuries in California. The efforts and findings presented in this report reflect the work of a team of experts in transportation engineering, transportation planning, public health, geographic information systems, and urban design from the UC Berkeley Safe Transportation Research & Education Center. In particular, Pedestrian Safety Improvement Program: Phase 2 is focused on three distinct areas pertaining to Caltrans’ pedestrian safety monitoring program: (i) pedestrian exposure modeling, (ii) contextualized hotspot development, and (iii) pedestrian safety toolkit development.
Abstract:
Publication date:
January 31, 2018
Publication type:
Research Report
Citation:
Griswold, J., Medury, A., Huang, L., Amos, D., Lu, J., Schneider, R., Grembek, O., & University of California, Berkeley. S. T. R. and E. C. (2018). Pedestrian Safety Improvement Program: Phase 2 (Nos. CA18-2452). /view/dot/43656