Skip to main content

COMMENT: Lessons from Bloomberg’s brush with danger

It’s not often that the ITS sector intersects with the art world, but Bloomberg is having a brush with danger. To explain: during 2020-21, Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Asphalt Art Initiative gave grants to dozens of cities to add a splash of colour to their roads in the form of intersection murals, crosswalk art, painted sidewalk extensions and so on.
By Adam Hill July 4, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Adam Hill, ITS International editor

There’s nothing new about paint when it comes to road markings, of course, but this colourful initiative had unexpected consequences. The Asphalt Art Safety Study from Sam Schwartz Consulting found that painting the town red – and green, purple and yellow - actually reduced traffic crash rates and unsafe driving. Paint, in other words, is not just pretty.

Janette Sadik-Khan, principal for transportation at Bloomberg Associates and former commissioner of the New York City Department of Transportation, believes this means there is a safety case for other arts-driven street design initiatives. “We crunched the numbers to show that projects like these are so much more than eye-candy,” she explains.

More research would be good; a number of elements are at play here and it will be useful to establish how much is down to the startling visibility of these junctions and how much to other factors. But the results are positive and, at the very least, are worthy of consideration for cities looking to manage reallocated roadspace in a post-Covid world.

True, paint is old technology - but with a bit of imagination it still has its uses. Does this mean it’s a substitute for other road safety management measures? No. But as a complement to them? Sure, why not.

Fresh thinking is welcome. And on that note, we’re delighted to publish the winning entry in ITS (UK)’s Essay Award, whose theme was the innovative application of ITS solutions to achieve decarbonisation goals. Mott MacDonald apprentice Leora Wilson has a number of interesting thoughts.

There are two main reasons for publishing it: one, it’s a good piece of writing; and two, it is by one of many bright young people who are choosing to make their career in our industry. We’re fortunate to have them; we need all the new talent we can get.

Related Content

  • March 9, 2018
    ITS (UK) Apprentice Essay winners receive awards
    Winners of the ITS (UK) Apprentice Essay have collected their awards from the Society’s president Steven Norris, at a ceremony in London. The competition set out to encourage and recognise talent in the next generation of transport professionals. Dan Johnson, apprentice transport planning technician at the Suffolk County Council and Leeds College of Building, won the award with his driverless vehicle essay Chummy Saves Christmas, based on the children’s TV show Brum. Joel Shevlin, apprentice transport
  • June 25, 2021
    Who run the engineering world? Women!
    To mark International Women in Engineering Day, Krishna Desai of Cubic Transportation Systems shares the experiences of female engineers working at the company...
  • April 15, 2024
    Breathing life into the V2X ‘zombie’
    Interest in Vehicle to Everything technology is intensifying, says Przemysław Krokosz at Mobica, although it still requires a critical mass of users to make it work
  • March 6, 2014
    Plug-and-play anti-collision technologies for everyone
    With an eye on the autonomous vehicle market, Soterea, a new high-tech firm in New Jersey, US, is developing plug-and-play anti-collision technologies that can make new and used vehicles safer, thereby helping to further evolve the critical element necessary to make driverless vehicles commercially viable. Soterea is the brainchild of two transportation technology experts, Eva Lerner-Lam and Alain L Kornhauser, each with more than four decades of experience in developing next generation technologies for