NTL Record

Title Safety Effectiveness of the HAWK Pedestrian Crossing Treatment
Record ID 65972
Personal Name
Creator
Fitzpatrick, Kay; Park, Eun Sug
Personal Name
Contributor
Do, Ann
Corporate Creator United States. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Safety Research and Development
Corporate
Contributor
Texas Transportation Institute
Publisher United States. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Safety Research and Development
Publication Date 20100701
Language English
Abstract The High intensity Activated crossWalK (HAWK) is a pedestrian-activated beacon located on the roadside and on mast arms over major approaches to an intersection. It was created in Tucson, AZ, and at the time of this study, it was used at more than 60 locations throughout the city. The HAWK head consists of two red lenses over a single yellow lens. It displays a red indication to drivers when activated, which creates a gap for pedestrians to use to cross a major roadway. A before-after study of the safety performance of the HAWK was conducted. The evaluations used an empirical Bayes (EB) method to compare the crash prediction for the after period if the treatment had not been applied to the observed crash frequency for the after period with the treatment installed. To develop the datasets used in this evaluation, crashes were counted if they occurred within the study period, typically 3 years before the HAWK installation and 3 years after the HAWK installation or up to the limit of the available crash data for the after period. Two crash datasets were created. The first dataset included intersecting street name (ISN) crashes, which were all crashes with the same intersecting street names that matched the intersections used in the study. The second dataset included intersection-related (IR) crashes, which were only those ISN crashes that had “yes” for the intersection-related code. The crash types that were examined included total, severe, and pedestrian crashes. From the evaluation that considered data for 21 HAWK sites (treatment sites) and 102 unsignalized intersections (reference group), the following changes in crashes were found after the HAWK was installed: a 29 percent reduction in total crashes (statistically significant), a 15 percent reduction in severe crashes (not statistically significant), and a 69 percent reduction in pedestrian crashes (statistically significant).
Rosap ID dot:41661
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/41661
TRT Terms Pedestrian safety; Crosswalks; Pedestrian-vehicle crashes; Unsignalized intersections; Beacons
Geographical
Coverage
United States
TRIS Online
Accession No
1221036
Contract Number DTH61-01-C-00049, Task Order #25
Report Number FHWA-HRT-10-042
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/65000/65900/65972/FHWA-HRT-10-042.pdf
Alternative URL https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/research/safety/10042/
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository