Many countries, and I assume that the Netherlands is among them, has an order of priority for conflicting signs in their traffic laws.
When I learned to drive (not in the Netherlands though), we were tought about three categories, here listed in the order of increasing priority:
Applied to the usage of road shoulders as regular lanes during rush hour, it means that the traffic light inidicating that you can use the lane has a higher relevance than the road markings indicating that you should not use the lane.
Another more common situation is perhaps (at least in many European countries) the combination of yield or stop signs and traffic lights. If the traffic lights are operating, the yield or stop signs have no significance at all. If the traffic lights are out of order or not in service, the traffic must follow the signs to determine right of way or duty to yield.
Above all kinds of markings and other signs are orders from police or other officials.
When it’s open, you’re allowed to cross the line. Source (Dutch).
I had never actually heard that before, so I assume everybody else reasons the same way I did: it’s an open lane, you’re obviously supposed to use it as a perfectly normal lane, so the fact that it can only be reached by crossing an uncrossable line must be a visual illusion that can be safely ignored 🙂
It’s a normal lane in every respect, so you have to move there if there is no reason not to, and when in one, you can’t overtake cars that drive in lanes further to the left.
An important detail is that you should only look at the digital signs above the lane to decide whether the lane is open (as you mentioned correctly), not at other signage to the side of the road. When the lane is open there is no emergency lane anymore, so when someone has to make an emergency stop, dangerous situations can arise. It will be immediately closed by means of the digital signs above the lane in that case (turn into a red cross), but the signs at the side probably won’t change.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
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