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Vision Zero

John Whitelegg
12 November 2015
This is Vauban, a suburb of Freiburg-im-Breisgau in southern Germany with 20mph speed limits, strict controls on cars entering the area, streets prioritised for children’s play and generous space for pedestrians
This is Vauban, a suburb of Freiburg-im-Breisgau in southern Germany with 20mph speed limits, strict controls on cars entering the area, streets prioritised for children’s play and generous space for pedestrians
These before and after photos show how streets can be redesigned so that they deliver high quality public space and give priority to pedestrian movement and pedestrian safety. This is a priority in Vison Zero
These before and after photos show how streets can be redesigned so that they deliver high quality public space and give priority to pedestrian movement and pedestrian safety. This is a priority in Vison Zero
These before and after photos show how streets can be redesigned so that they deliver high quality public space and give priority to pedestrian movement and pedestrian safety. This is a priority in Vison Zero
These before and after photos show how streets can be redesigned so that they deliver high quality public space and give priority to pedestrian movement and pedestrian safety. This is a priority in Vison Zero
These two photos are from this publication and are recommendations for Indian cities. Both show the possibilities around giving pedestrians more space
These two photos are from this publication and are recommendations for Indian cities. Both show the possibilities around giving pedestrians more space
These two photos are from this publication and are recommendations for Indian cities. Both show the possibilities around giving pedestrians more space
These two photos are from this publication and are recommendations for Indian cities. Both show the possibilities around giving pedestrians more space
John Whitelegg, Stockholm Environment Institute, University of York
John Whitelegg, Stockholm Environment Institute, University of York

 

In the calendar year 2014 two elderly pedestrians were killed on the A49 road in the vicinity of the small town of Church Stretton, Shropshire (population 4,700). These deaths had a large impact on this small town, affecting many people and extending well beyond the boundaries of close family and friends. Both of those killed were well known and both were physically active and going about their normal everyday tasks. The World Health Organisation conclusion quoted in this article is clear and accurate. It is glaringly obvious that local residents in this quiet corner of Shropshire require a much stronger and deeper approach to road safety than is currently on offer. This would come under several names e.g. a total system approach or a fundamental redesign approach or what is known in Sweden as Vision Zero.

Whatever name is used the principles are clear:

  • Death and injuries in the road traffic environment are predictable and preventable and a total approach to all the variables that contribute to death and injury must be redesigned to get the numbers down to the lowest possible level.

  • The design principles are based on physical and kinetic energy and require that mass and velocity are controlled to minimise or eliminate death and serious injury in crashes. At the core of the Vision Zero is the biomechanical tolerance of human beings. Vision Zero promotes a road system where crash energy cannot exceed human tolerance.

  • Current approaches to road safety are inadequate. There is no learning mechanism linked to redesign and funding to produce a total design that eliminates death and injury. When a fatality occurs on the UK road system very little happens to learn from that incident and apply the new knowledge to making sure that the probability of similar incidents in the future is significantly reduced.

  • Death and injury in road crashes are a public health problem and not a problem that falls exclusively within traffic planning and traffic engineering specialist areas. Public health embraces important issues around measures and interventions at a population level that are intended to change attitudes and behaviour and an understanding of “denominator issues” and a deep understanding of looking at the total “burden of disease” and DALYS (Disability Adjusted Life Years” (Note 1)

All of these principles are part of the Swedish “Vision Zero” road safety policy.

The denominator issue

In Hillman, Adams and Whitelegg (1990) the authors present and analyse data to show that the numbers of children making independent journeys to school had reduced from about 80% in 1970 to 8% in 1990. The numbers of people exposed to risk had gone down and this reduction in the bottom line of the fraction (the denominator) had played a significant part in reducing death and injury. Official statements in the UK often proclaim the success of road safety measures because numbers killed and seriously injured have gone down. If the denominator shrinks then the KSI number goes down as a result of people abandoning the street e.g. not walking to school and it has nothing to with road safety measures.

A key principle in Vision Zero is to reduce road traffic danger and risk so that the denominator goes up (more people use streets) and KSI numbers go down.

Vision Zero

In October 1997 the Swedish Parliament adopted its “Vision Zero” road safety policy. This policy sets a target of zero deaths and zero serious injuries in the road traffic environment and puts the responsibility for achieving this goal on all those responsible for the total road safety system. This means that the detailed design of the road, the vehicle and driving behaviour must be tackled as a “total system” so that “a mistake in the road traffic environment does not carry the death penalty”. The Swedish approach is an ethical and civilised response to the unacceptability of death and serious injury on the roads.

Vision Zero sets a clear ethical tone to the road safety policy discussion. We do not have to accept death and injury as inevitable even if the number is lower than it could be. We do not have to think of the victim as in some way responsible e.g. he/she should not have been walking along the road or should have been wearing a high-visibility jacket. We do have to think about the ability of the human frame to absorb kinetic energy and adjust speeds accordingly. We can and should have a total 20mph speed limit on every residential road and on all A roads a couple of miles either side of a small town or village (like the A49 in Church Stretton). We can and should change the culture of driving so that high speeds become as unacceptable as drink driving. We can and should enforce the speed limits but as much by cultural change and social marketing as by traditional policing. We can and should retro-fit generous bike paths and pedestrian paths on existing roads as well as make them mandatory when governments start talking about £15 billion on new roads.

What would Vision Zero Britain look like?

The key policy interventions include:

  • Speed control (20mph in all urban areas and on all roads when those roads approach or leave towns and villages)

  • Blood alcohol limit set at the Swedish level (0.02%). England and Wales is currently 0.08%

  • A zero tolerance policy for drug taking and driving

  • Accident investigation agency modelled on the Swedish experience and independent of the police

  • Law reform to deal with citizen concern about severe outcomes being dealt with “leniently” and a judicial system that respects those affected by death and injury and learns lessons from individual incidents and makes recommendations for changing those aspects of total design that are not working as well as they should

  • Road traffic reduction

  • Urban design to deliver clear road traffic danger reduction danger reduction for vulnerable users

The key message in Vision Zero is that all these things must be done in ways that every measure and intervention supports every other measure and intervention. It is important to harvest the power of synergy where everything works in the same direction and where an overall ethical, zero tolerance approach takes root in every part of the system.

The two pedestrian deaths in the vicinity of Church Stretton have resulted in no action whatsoever to deal with speed limits, pedestrian crossing facilities or pedestrian pavements. There is no learning mechanism. Vision Zero means that the deaths would be investigated in detail and steps taken to make sure the factors that gave rise to the deaths are dealt with.

Conclusion

Sweden’s Vision Zero policy has been in place for 18 years and has had a transformational effect on the way road traffic danger and total design is tackled. It energises every component of the system and stimulates a year-on-year improvement in the ways the total system operates.

Swedish fatalities in 2011 (the latest statistics available from the European Commission) were 29 per 10 billion passenger kms, the lowest in the EU. The EU-27 average is 61 fatalities on the same measure. All death and injury statistics have to be treated with great caution because of the denominator problem discussed above but the EU statistics are still relevant to a policy discussion.

The Vision Zero debate is at its core very simple. It is about choice and what kind of future we want. We can have a future based on the idea that “accidents happen” and we accept that the way we move around will inevitably kill and injure people. Alternatively we can have a future based on the idea that we will transform the total road traffic environment to get as close as possible to zero deaths as possible. Vision Zero is the embodiment of the ethical alternative. We can do far more to eliminate death and injury on the roads. If fatalities are predictable and preventable as the World Health Organisation maintains why we would not set out to eliminate this scourge? 

Note 1: http://www.who.int/healthinfo/global_burden_disease/metrics_daly/en/
Note 2: http://sei-international.org/mediamanager/documents/Publications/Future/vision_zero_FinalReportMarch06.pdf
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