From Deseret News archives:
Roundabouts gaining acceptance
Lehi, other Utah County cities say the interchanges work
Now if folks could just get used to it.
"Most people don't move directly into the traffic flow. They stop and wait until the whole circle is empty," Mellor said.
Mellor's home and business are just a block away from Lehi's roundabout, so he knew firsthand the traffic headaches that grew when a two-lane Main Street in a country town in a matter of years because the main corridor to three growing cities.
Engineer Kyle Comer said the Lehi roundabout designed to handle up to 16,000 cars a day seemed like the perfect solution to two major problems: Cars needed to be funneled through the intersection faster, yet motorists needed to slow down.
The campaign to gain approval for the roundabout's construction was bumpy, he said. Westerners simply aren't used to such a road design.
"There's more attention paid to how the cars come in, and they are significantly more thought-out," said Comer, who works for Civil Science Engineering.
Roundabouts are gaining popularity. It seems there's a roundabout at nearly every turn.
Eagle Mountain, Lehi, Alpine, Cedar Hills, Lindon and Utah Valley State College which last week was given $1.6 million by the Utah Transportation Commission to build an extra lane to connect to the I-15 onramp all have solved intersection issues with roundabouts.
Orem and Provo, Utah County's largest cities, also have started building roundabouts.



You can be the first to comment on this story.