Pedestrian confusion
We spotted this sign this morning at Miami-Dade College near the Seven50 Summit. What’s wrong with this picture?
The sidewalk on the left is open and was filled with students so much that the two in the picture were overflowing onto the street.
2 Responses to Pedestrian confusion
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
LISTEN TO THE LATEST TALKING HEADWAYS PODCAST
Find us on Facebook
Recent Comments
- Mark on FDOT: No Bicycle Lanes for Sunset Drive
- Anonymous on FDOT District 4 Bicycle/Pedestrian Coordinator
- Mike Arias on Friday Funny: The TIGER Grant
- Mike Lintro on City of Miami Public Hearing: Small Building Parking Exemption
- Anonymous on Follow Tri-Rail on Twitter
- Anonymous on Follow Tri-Rail on Twitter
Subscribe via Email
Recent Activity
Tags
Bicycle Bicycle Infrastructure bicycles bike lanes Bike Miami Days Bikes bikeway biking Brickell bus Calendar Climate Change Coconut Grove complete streets Congestion Cycling Downtown Miami Downtown Miami FDOT MDT Metromover Metrorail Miami Miami-Dade County Miami-Dade Transit Miami 21 Miami Beach Miami Dade Parking Parks Pedestrian Pedestrian Activity Pedestrians Pic o' the Day Public Transit Rickenbacker Causeway Sprawl Streetcar Traffic Transit Transit Oriented Development Transportation Tri-Rail Uncategorized Urban Planning
Every street in the city’s inner city neighborhoods should have crosslights and crosswalks.
True, and this intersection does. The point here is the confusing construction sign. The sidewalk is closed on the right side, not the left side. As such, the sign is in the wrong place, and the arrow suggests you cross over to where the sidewalk is closed.