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Baked I'm afraid. The Lion's Gate bridge in Vancouver has been like this for decades and a number of roads, tunnels and bridges in eastern Australia have the same function. See [Link] for a list of reversible lanes around the world. |
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Golden Gate bridge has used them for many, many years.
<link> |
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Baked to a crisp in Seattle... |
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[Marked-For-Deletion] Widely known to exist. |
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Seattle is where I first saw them, on a bridge, decades ago. Jefferson City, Missouri, has a bridge with them. Those are all one level with no dividers, and just use lights to tell drivers which way is which. Outside Washington, DC, the freeways at least have the decency to separate the reversing lanes off as a nearly-separate road system. |
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Chicago also has 'reversible' lanes. Still, good thinking if you had never heard of them before. |
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I think Chicago's reversible lanes are probably safer
than bidirectional ones. But well-baked anyway. |
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Incidentally, the M25 has baked a version of this.
Between 12noon and 2pm, and again between
midnight and 2am, the lanes are used for moving
traffic. At other times they are used for stationary
traffic. |
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Bangkok has also had this for decades, although it still has hideous traffic jams. Letting cars into cities in the first place is Where It All Went Wrong. |
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Baked this or baked that...
I bet there will soon be a billion of us staring at the counterflow
lanes every morning, every night wishing such an idea could
come true.
As we see the empty lanes on the other side. |
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