Diamond lane

In the United States and Canada, a diamond lane is a special lane on a street or highway that is reserved for specific types of traffic. These lanes are usually marked with white diamonds or lozenge, hence their name. Diamond lanes are generally the right-most or left-most lane on the road. They are usually implemented to provide ways through traffic congestion, for safety reasons, and to encourage environmentally friendly transportation. A diamond lane may be intended for a specific type of traffic, or for several types. The intended use of a diamond lane is marked by traffic signs. In most areas, violating the rules of a diamond lane is punishable by a fine.

A rider in a bicycle diamond lane

Some common examples are:

Standards

The Federal Highway Administration's Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices states that diamonds indicates a lane reserved for high-occupancy vehicles.[1]

gollark: Generally running on potatOS-knows-what random access memory and logic and FILT ROMs.
gollark: You can implement simple logic gates and stuff on top of its semiconductors, IIRC, but the focus now is on subframe logic which exploits crazy weird mechanics.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: 1MB isn't "like" 1000000 bits, it *is* 1000000 bits. The power of two ones are MiB and whatnot.
gollark: I guess one *millibit* (CAPITALIZE YOUR UNITS) is okay though.

See also

References

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