Skip to main content

Mind the gap! Maryland introduces bollards on metro platforms

Designed to protect visually impaired people, they are installed at 14 subway stations
By Adam Hill January 4, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
A new control system means the gap between cars will align with the new barriers (image: Maryland Transit Adminstration)

Maryland Transit Administration has begun installing safety bollards at its metro stations to prevent passengers stepping off the platform onto the tracks.

The bright yellow posts will be in place at the agency’s 14 metro subway stations from Owings Mills to Johns Hopkins. 

In line with a new federal safety requirement, they are positioned in front of the gaps between railcars to prevent riders - especially those with visual impairment - from mistaking the gap for a train door opening.

Maryland worked with the National Federation for the Blind, Blind Industries and Services of Maryland and the agency’s Citizens Advisory Committee and Citizens Advisory Committee for Accessible Transportation on the project.

Each station will have 10 posts, which the agency says will provide protection whether metro trains are two-, four- or six-cars long.

A new control system allows trains to stop at a precise location in each station so that the gap between cars will align with the new barriers. 

Similar devices have been installed in metro systems in Los Angeles, St. Louis and Pittsburgh.

“Ensuring the safety and security of our passengers remains at the forefront of our mission,” said Maryland Transit Administrator Holly Arnold. “The installation of these bollards aligns with our ongoing commitment to provide safe and accessible transit service for all.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Rio’s TMC rises to Olympic challenge
    October 27, 2016
    Timothy Compston lifts the lid on Rio de Janeiro’s preparations for keeping its transport systems moving during the Olympics – and the outcome. Hosting the Olympics poses major traffic management challenges for any city and Rio was no exception – especially as it is already one of the world’s most congested cities. Beyond its normal 6.5 million inhabitants wanting to carry on their daily lives, in August Rio was also home to 11,300 athletes from 206 countries. Athletes who, without fail, had to reach their
  • IP technology the route to efficient multi-agency control rooms
    February 1, 2012
    As IP-based technology makes its presence felt in the control room sector, it makes for greater economies of scale and also offers a migration path for many other traffic management technologies. So says Barco's Guy Van Wijmeersch. Efficient control room collaboration and decision-making is only possible if operators and decision-makers have easy and timely access to information. In many cases, that information also needs to be accessible to multiple users at the same time. This is certainly so in the case
  • Thales to upgrade New York’s Queens Boulevard subway line
    October 1, 2015
    In a contract worth US$49.6 million from the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), Thales is to upgrade the New York subway’s busy Queens Boulevard Line with its signalling solution. The contract includes the deployment of the Thales’s communications-based train control system, SelTrac CBTC, as well as the supply of equipment for the line’s train fleet. Design work for the Queens Boulevard Line is getting underway and installations are expected to begin in mid-2017.
  • Smoothing the path to reducing traffic pollution
    October 22, 2014
    David Crawford reviews a new approach to traffic smoothing. A key objective for the Californian city of Bakersfield’s upgraded traffic operations centre (TOC), which opened in June 2014, is to help improve living conditions in a region with one of the worst air quality problems in the US. The TOC is speeding up the smoothing of traffic flows by delivering faster and better-informed traffic signal retiming and synchronisation.