Bus trap

A bus trap (car trap in the UK) is a metal grate placed over a ditch or pit in the road with tines (sides) spaced far enough apart that small (shorter axle) vehicles fall between the tines but close enough that larger-diameter-wheeled vehicles, such as buses, may pass. Cycles may cross broader sided examples.

A bus trap in Denmark
A bus trap in northern Aarhus, Denmark

Different versions exist for restricting access. The tines cross the path of the road, not parallel with the road direction. Small-wheeled vehicles bottom out in between the tines, preventing the vehicle from continuing over the obstacle.

Deprecation and preferred alternatives

Many domestic vehicles exist in the 21st century wide enough to navigate bus traps effectively; wide-axle SUVs and 4x4s. Police cars and in some cases motorbikes are hindered by bus traps. Most cities favour other means of keeping cars out of bus-only areas, such as:

  • fines backed up with camera enforcement
  • a controlled barrier, such as a rising clearly marked bollard kept in a default risen state may use radio-frequency identification
gollark: What use could it actually be?
gollark: * dumping *to* tapes
gollark: Fun fact: dumping tapes is faster than loading them, since Computronics only allows reading in 256-byte blocks, unless that was fixed.
gollark: Except its stack traces conflict with the potatOS built in ones...
gollark: Huh, MBS works now!

See also

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