That was my first guess. Pretty stupid if true.Lets vision impaired people know there is an intersection/street crossing.
Perhaps they are a Darwinian enforcement device.Those things are a death trap in the rain. I almost ended up in front of a speeding train at a light rail station because of those.
this, for one thing.Why is it stupid?
Those things are a death trap in the rain. I almost ended up in front of a speeding train at a light rail station because of those.
That was my first guess. Pretty stupid if true.
Those things are a death trap in the rain. I almost ended up in front of a speeding train at a light rail station because of those.
What happens to them in rain?
What happens to them in rain?
They get incredibly slippery. And if it's sleeting/snowing, they can never be cleaned of all the snow, etc., and end up freezing into big patches of ice.
ETA: I'm talking about the metal ones. I don't know what the rubbery ones do.
Exactly.We have those, only the metal is painted yellow, and they are more like a curb cut ramp for accessibility. I get that they are for vision-impaired people, but it gives people in a wheelchair a rough patch to navigate.
We have those, only the metal is painted yellow, and they are more like a curb cut ramp for accessibility. I get that they are for vision-impaired people, but it gives people in a wheelchair a rough patch to navigate.
B.
Protection for sidewalk openings. Every opening to any vault, coal hole, chute or aperture in the sidewalk over the same shall be covered with a substantial, good and sufficient iron or steel door or doors, plate or plates with other than a smooth or slippery surface, and shall be laid even with the sidewalk so that persons using the sidewalk can pass with safety over the door, plate or plates.
We have those but they're some sort of rubbery/silicone creation. They are not slippery in the rain.
So let me see if I’ve got this straight.
It’s a device for tripping blind people before they enter a street crossing. It has the additional feature of serving as a wheelchair trap. Being steel, it won’t retain heat very long so it will let ice form easily, and it hides well under a pretty thin layer of snow, so in the Wisconsin winters it endangers everyone.
Do have all that correct? This appears to be an ADA-compliance device that was designed by the mentally handicapped, so I guess it’s a win all around.
https://idot.illinois.gov/Assets/uploads/files/Transportation-System/Manuals-Guides-&-Handbooks/T2/E002 Detectable Warnings Synthesis of U.S. and International Practice.pdfSo let me see if I’ve got this straight.
It’s a device for tripping blind people before they enter a street crossing. It has the additional feature of serving as a wheelchair trap. Being steel, it won’t retain heat very long so it will let ice form easily, and it hides well under a pretty thin layer of snow, so in the Wisconsin winters it endangers everyone.
Do have all that correct? This appears to be an ADA-compliance device that was designed by the mentally handicapped, so I guess it’s a win all around.
So let me see if I’ve got this straight.
It’s a device for tripping blind people before they enter a street crossing. It has the additional feature of serving as a wheelchair trap. Being steel, it won’t retain heat very long so it will let ice form easily, and it hides well under a pretty thin layer of snow, so in the Wisconsin winters it endangers everyone.
Do have all that correct? This appears to be an ADA-compliance device that was designed by the mentally handicapped, so I guess it’s a win all around.
So people that don't even live where there's snow and ice are the ones complaining about this being slippery when there's snow and ice?
Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight.
One of my guesses was that it was to deter bikes / rollerblades / skateboarding.They are also an extreme hazard to rollerbladers, and almost impossible to get around them. There were so many of those in my hometown, I ended up using the street more often than not to avoid those because they were so hard to navigate!
https://idot.illinois.gov/Assets/uploads/files/Transportation-System/Manuals-Guides-&-Handbooks/T2/E002 Detectable Warnings Synthesis of U.S. and International Practice.pdf
Here is more information on detectable warning surfaces than you’ll ever read but it’s actually a quite well studied device.
A choice quote on the topic of mobility impaired users
“
Hauger et al. (1994) had 30 participants with mobility impairments travel up and down curb-ramps with and without truncated domes.
• A majority felt that they were safer, had better traction, and were more stable on ramps having truncated domes than on concrete ramps.
• Forty four percent of participants said it required less effort to negotiate up and down the ramps with detectable warnings than the concrete curb-ramps; 23% said the reverse.
• Some wheelchair users said it was easier to find and steer toward the up-ramp on the opposite corner when it had the contrasting detectable warning surface.
”
They are also an extreme hazard to rollerbladers, and almost impossible to get around them.
One of my guesses was that it was to deter bikes / rollerblades / skateboarding.
Do you mean the plates or the blind people?