Seagull intersection
A seagull intersection or continuous green T-intersection or High-T intersection ) is a type of three-way road intersection, usually used on high traffic volume roads and dual carriageways. This form of intersection is popular in Australia and New Zealand, and sometimes used in the United States and other countries.
Design
Seagull intersections get their name from the pattern that the two cross-traffic turn lanes make when looking down from the air.In a seagull intersection, one or more lanes of traffic on the arterial road, on the carriageway opposite the intersecting side road, are free flowing, that is, one direction of traffic on the arterial is allowed to travel straight through without stopping. The free-flowing lane are called "continuous green through lane". For the free-flowing through lanes, access into and out of the side road is provided via turn lanes separated from the through lanes in a configuration similar to exit and entrance ramps at an interchange; however, the turn lanes are at the same grade as both carriageways of the arterial and are located on the same side as the oncoming traffic.
Those wishing to turn across traffic into the side road at the intersection drive into the turn lane, which forms one "wing" of the seagull. Here, they meet the opposite carriageway and the side road. Traffic wishing to turn across traffic out of the side road, cross the intersecting carriageway, drive up the other "wing" of the seagull, and merge onto the other carriageway.
For the arterial carriageway adjacent to the side road, access into and out of the side road is ordinarily handled like a conventional T intersection. However, some seagull intersections may have a second, smaller "seagull" formed by two left turning lanes into and out of the side road.
Different methods are used to control traffic where two right-turning movements and the through movement meet. Most intersections use traffic lights, while others use give way and stop signs, and sometimes roundabouts.
This design type has been proven to provide sustainable benefits when compared the traditional T-intersection design. By reducing delay through the intersection, automobiles use less fuel on average passing through the intersection, and thus emissions are reduced across the intersection. The savings per vehicle may not seem very significant, but when scaled to account for all automobiles passing through the intersection, the total emission savings are significant. Additionally, there are economic and social benefits to reducing delay time and allowing drivers to pass through the intersection quicker. In the Netherlands, this type of intersection occurs by default when a T-junction has a bicycle path on the continuing road, and is not intersected by a roadway for motorized vehicles. The bicycle path may ignore red lights; it is only turning cyclists that must wait for the red light.
History
An experiment was done in Illinois, United States to allow going straight on red when approaching a T junction on the main road, with the intersecting road on the left. It was a failure. However, at some T junctions where the main road includes at least two lanes on the side away from the intersecting road, the farthest lane is given the right of way to proceed straight through the intersection at all times, denoted by a "green arrow" signal if a traffic light is installed at the intersection. In such cases, often that lane is also specially delimited with pavement markings or other lane separation devices, to keep left-turning traffic on the intersecting road from colliding with traffic proceeding through the intersection on the main road. The seagull intersection was developed as a safer variation of this.List of seagull intersections
Australia
- Cotter Road at Streeton Drive – Weston Creek
- Geelong Road at Millers Road - Brooklyn, Victoria
- Pacific Highway at Peats Ferry Road and Wattle Street - Asquith, New South Wales
- Ginninderra Drive at Coulter Drive - Belconnen
- Ginninderra Drive at William Slim Drive - Belconnen
- Ginninderra Drive at Tillyard Drive - Belconnen
- Highway 1 at Island Point Road – Tomerong, New South Wales
- Highway 1 at Kells Road – Tomerong, New South Wales
- Dandenong Road at Grange Road - Carnegie, Victoria
- Dandenong Road at Blackburn Road - Clayton, Australia
- Lonsdale Street at South Gippsland Highway - Dandenong, Victoria
Canada
- Chancellor Blvd and Wesbrook Mall
- at College Drive to Central Avenue
- at Circle Drive to Airport Drive
- at Circle Drive to Laurier Drive
- at Circle Drive to Clancy Drive
- at 22nd Street to Hart Road
- at Highway 97 to Okanagan Lake Provincial Park South
- at Highway 97 to Bridgeman Road
- at Highway 97 to Walters Road
- at Highway 97 to Lakeshore Drive S
- at Highway 97 to Pyramid Provincial Park
- at Highway 97 to Sage Mesa Drive
- at Highway 97 to W Bench Hill Road
- at Highway 97 to Warren Avenue W
- at Highway 97 to Green Avenue W
- at Highway 97 to Enterprise Way
Germany
- at Hauptstraße / Bundesstraße 51 in Olzheim
- at Hauptstraße / Bundesstraße 51 in Dahlem
- at Greven Interchange of Bundesautobahn 1 to Bundesstraße 481 and
- at Würselen Interchange of Bundesautobahn 544 to Verlautenheidener Straße
- Frechen-Nord interchange of Bundesautobahn 4
New Zealand
- Upper Harbour Highway at Paul Matthews Drive – North Shore, Auckland
- Wairau Road at Forrest Hill Road – Takapuna, Auckland
- Waikato Expressway at Island Block Road, Springhill Road, and Dragway Road – Meremere
- State Highway 1 at Whitford Brown Drive – Porirua
- River Road at Gibbons Street – Upper Hutt
- Western Hutt Road /River Road at Fergusson Drive – Silverstream, Upper Hutt
Poland
- aleja Młodzieży Polskiej at Kościuszki - Słubice
Singapore
- Various junctions along the Outer Ring Road System
United States
- US 60 at Mountain View Road – Apache Junction, Arizona
- 24th Street at Lincoln Drive – Phoenix, Arizona
- In Tucson, Arizona:
- * W. Anklam Road at Pima Community College main entrance
- * S. Wilmot Road at Park Place mall entrance
- Santa Monica Boulevard at Avenue of the Stars – Los Angeles, California
- US 285 at US 24 – Buena Vista, Colorado
- US 160 at US 550 – Durango, Colorado
- US 50 at SH 141 – Grand Junction, Colorado
- NASA Parkway at Space Commerce Way - Brevard County, Florida east of Titusville, and just west of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
- US 92 split/join with US 17 - Lake Alfred, Florida
- US 92 at Reynolds Road - Lakeland, Florida
- Sand Lake Road at Greenbrier Parkway - Orlando, Florida
- Radio City Drive at Edgewater Drive - Pekin and North Pekin, Illinois
- N. Sheridan Road at shopping center entrance - Peoria, Illinois
- MD 210 at MD 228 - Accokeek, Maryland, opened in 2000, is a hybrid, also having characteristics of a continuous-flow intersection.
- MN 13 near its interchange with US 169 and County Road 101 – Savage, Minnesota, is a hybrid, with a partial interchange in the opposite direction of travel.
- In Boulder City, Nevada:
- * US 93 Business at Lake Mountain Drive
- * US 93 Business at Lakeshore Road
- Cheyenne Avenue in Las Vegas, Nevada has four seagull intersections between Clark County Route 215 and Rampart Boulevard.
- SR 687 at 25th Street NW and Harrison Avenue NW - Canton, Ohio
- US 52 at the Ben Williamson Memorial Bridge and the Simeon Willis Memorial Bridge – Coal Grove, Ohio, is a continuous green T/inverted SPUI hybrid.
- SR 7 at I-470 - Pultney Township, Belmont County, Ohio, is a continuous green T/inverted SPUI hybrid.
- Oregon Route 213 at its north terminus with Airport Way - Portland, Oregon
- PA 28 at the 40th Street Bridge - Millvale, Pennsylvania, is a continuous green T/inverted SPUI hybrid.
- US 129 at SR 168 – Knoxville, Tennessee, is a hybrid, with a partial interchange in the opposite direction of travel.
- US 83/US 84 east/US 277 at Bus. I-20-R/US 84 west – Abilene, Texas. Folded diamond ramps from Winters Freeway form continuous green T intersections with South 1st Street.
- East Riverside Drive at South Lakeshore Boulevard - Austin, Texas
- Allen Parkway at Taft Street – Houston, Texas
- Bicentennial Boulevard at Lark Avenue – McAllen, Texas
- SR-201 at SR-111 – Magna, Utah
- Spout Run Parkway at Lorcom Lane - Arlington, Virginia
- US 15 at Fort Evans Road NE - Leesburg, Virginia