Detour

A detour or (British English: diversion) is a (normally temporary) route taking traffic around an area of prohibited or reduced access, such as a construction site. Standard operating procedure for many roads departments is to route any detour over roads within the same jurisdiction as the road with the obstructed area.[1]

Detour sign used in Singapore
Detour sign used in the United States
Diverted cycle route in the UK

On multi-lane highways (e.g., freeways, expressways, city streets, etc.), usually traffic shifts can replace a detour, as detours often congest turn lanes.

Permanently signed detour routes

gollark: But you need another computer and a disk drive for that.
gollark: Well, that is *a* way, yes.
gollark: It's not a *maths* problem as much as a *can you look up one of the many, many tools to solve a simple task* problem.
gollark: The product of two prime numbers.
gollark: People go "AAAAAAAAA DIFFICULT MATHS AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA I HAVE NOT SEEN THIS BEFORE HELP ME IT IS VIRUS".

References

  1. Example: Dits, Joseph (2011-04-19). "Capital Ave. to be closed at railroad tracks in Mishawaka for a week" (fee required). South Bend Tribune. Retrieved 2011-04-20. The state will erect signs that take car traffic on a detour all the way through downtown South Bend a longer detour than local residents could figure out because the state has to use state roads, said InDOT spokesman Jim Pinkerton.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.