this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2024
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Note: the archived version seems to be a little out of date, and missing some details.
The "elderly man" in question was in his early 70s, which isn't what I'd normally classify as "elderly". Old, perhaps, but elderly implies a certain visibly increased frailty to me that comes more in your 80s. Anyway, sharing this for two reasons. One is that the guy was my principal in primary school, and a man my parents knew well (the deputy principal at the time was a very close friend of my parents, and still is—I see him most weeks).
The second is that you just know no one, anywhere, is going to be talking about the infrastructure or the way it contributed to the problem. No transport engineer will ever face the mildest criticism over this. But the road in question is far higher-speed and far wider than is reasonable, particularly Kittyhawk Drive, the road he was presumably crossing at the time based on the description. If Kittyhawk were reclassified as the Neighbourhood Road it so clearly should be (as opposed to a District Road), and the crossing converted into a wombat crossing, and narrowed to 1 lane each way, it would be so much safer, and so much less likely for the mistakes of one reckless idiot to result in the death of an innocent man just going for a walk.
I'm presently trying to explain this to my parents, who responded when I gave them the above spiel ending with "we never fix the damn underlying problems" with "and we never will. does any country really?" Yes! Some places do! @notjustbikes@notjustbikes.com has some excellent videos for getting these points across. Namely, The Wrong Way to Set Speed Limits and Why Cars Rarely Crash Into Buildings in the Netherlands.