How do busy intersections do in poor countries if they have no traffic lights?

Upvote:0

Busy intersections with no traffic lights are actually less dangerous. And a complete lack of markings or expectations is not too bad either in those conditions. My experience in places like Lebanon is indeed that cars cluster and move slowly. At some point there is no clear paths anymore, people will try to cut through the intersection in every conceivable way.

It feels like complete chaos (this video I just found on YouTube seems quite representative), it's not very efficient, but it's not dangerous per se. If there is a collision, it will be at lower speed and that'll be it. Motorways, intersections with lower traffic (allowing driver to speed through), or even traffic lights (because it creates empty space and too many people ignore them in unpredictable ways) can be more dangerous.

Things like a taxi driver pulling back in reverse after missing an exit on the motorway feel much more dangerous (last time it happened to me was in Istanbul).

Upvote:1

I don't think it will be particularly dangerous.

Pedestrians will take precedence and they will thus allow some cars from the opposite sides to pass.

In ex-USSR countries (and probably other European countries too?) there's a rule of "obstacle from the right". It means that you have to let cars coming from the right pass while you have priority over cars coming from your left. If all four sides of intersection are occupied by cars then the order is undefined.

In USA when traffic lights break I've witnessed that cars take rounds to cross the intersection, two cars a time. Was pretty efficient without any horn honking.

Upvote:4

Generally speaking, things tend to just go slower and jam up in poorer countries but this makes it a lot more safe. There are fewer collisions when vehicles move slowly and accidents become less serious when they do happen.

Depending on the culture, things move differently. People all want to go some place so they advance as much as they can, honk, move a little, honk again and repeat. In some places like Bolivia, it seems like things just do not move at all. Others, like in Vietnam, they never stop completely and move slowly but almost continuously, constantly maneuvering to avoid collision. This was fascinating to me as the concept of lane is barely used in the north, when as many fit passed side-by-side and it was very hard to tell which way a street went. In Saigon though, lanes were marked and people more or less stuck to them, except for wides ones made for free-flowing motorbikes.

When there are no traffic lights, there are rarely many stop signs either. In Hanoi, it took me a while to notice but there are traffic lights, only most of them are not working or turned off. There and in many African countries, they have some type of traffic police at the busiest intersections. Still, most streets with no traffic lights, do not get someone there but my experience is that they mostly watch and on some occasions whistle, but they rarely actively manage traffic as traffic police in modern countries like Canada.

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