Before-after safety analysis of a shared space implementation
Federico Orsini, Mariana Batista, Bernhard Friedrich, Massimiliano, Gastaldi, Riccardo Rossi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel methodology using surrogate safety measures and Extreme Value Theory to quantitatively assess crash risk changes before and after shared space implementation, providing a comprehensive safety evaluation.
Contribution
It presents an advanced, data-driven approach combining surrogate safety measures and probabilistic modeling to evaluate urban design safety impacts more accurately.
Findings
Shared space reduced crash risk significantly.
Behavioral changes in speed and trajectories observed.
Methodology applicable for urban safety assessments.
Abstract
Shared spaces aim to reduce the dominance of motor vehicles by promoting pedestrian and cyclist activity and minimizing segregation between road users. Despite the intended scope to improve the safety of vulnerable road users, only few works in the literature focused on before after safety evaluations, mainly analyzing changes in users trajectories and speeds, traffic volumes, and conflict counts, which, while useful, cannot univocally quantify road safety. Here, we propose a more advanced methodology, based on surrogate measures of safety and Extreme Value Theory, to assess road safety before and after the implementation of a shared space. The aim is to produce a crash risk estimation in different scenarios, obtaining a quantitative and comprehensive indicator, useful to practitioners for evaluating the safety of urban design solutions. A real world case study illustrates the proposed…
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