• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact
  • Our clients
  • Testimonials
  • About
    • Allan Dunlop
  • Acknowledgments

The Center for Cycling Education

> Online traffic skills courses / learn-to-ride lessons

  • ONLINE COURSES
    • Traffic Smarts for Cyclists
      • Purchasing for your organization
        • Request complimentary access
      • Individual purchase: USA
      • Individual purchase: CANADA
      • Purchasing for friends & family members
      • Applying a coupon code
    • ‘Defensive Cycling’ (ticket dismissal)
      • Info for courts, attorneys, & LEOs
      • Info for course participants
        • Austin, TX and region
        • Houston, TX
        • Resources
    • About our online courses
      • Navigation, interactivity, & quizzes
  • ON-BIKE TRAINING
    • Riding in traffic
    • Learn to ride a bike
      • Read one mother’s story
      • About the training
      • CO: Fort Collins & Laporte
      • Other locations
  • CYCLING SKILLS
    • Riding in traffic
      • Five key traffic principles
      • Changing lanes in traffic
      • Triggering a traffic light on your bike
      • Navigating traffic circles & roundabouts
      • Riding with kids
    • Bike handling
      • Braking
      • Shifting gears
    • Equipment
      • Parts of the bicycle
      • Checking your bike for safety
      • Choosing & adjusting your bicycle helmet
  • CYCLING LAWS
    • Canada
      • AB – Alberta
        • Alberta Traffic Safety Act
      • BC – British Columbia
        • British Columbia Motor Vehicle Act
      • SK – Saskatchewan
        • Saskatchewan Traffic Safety Act
        • Regina: Traffic bylaw — Cyclists
        • Saskatoon: Cycling bylaw
    • USA
      • Uniform Vehicle Code
      • CA – California
        • California Vehicle Code
        • Santa Monica
          • Santa Monica Municipal Code
      • TX – Texas
        • Texas Transportation Code
        • Austin Code of Ordinances
        • Houston Code of Ordinances
      • VA – Virginia
        • Code of Virginia: Motor Vehicles
      • WA – Washington State
        • Revised Code of Washington (RCW)
        • Seattle Municipal Code
Home » People in cars ignoring people on foot

People in cars ignoring people on foot

East Riverside Drive at Lakeshore Boulevard in Austin, TX.

East Riverside Drive at Lakeshore Boulevard -- Austin, TX
East Riverside Drive at Lakeshore Boulevard — Austin, TX

(From 2011 to 2015, I lived near this location. This post, created in 2014, gives an indication of the climate facing people walking along this stretch of East Riverside Drive.)

east-riverside-a
Drivers would occasionally stop when someone on foot was approaching this crossing headed northwest (‘up’ in the photo marked ‘A’). However, when headed in the other direction (proceeding from the side shown in the photos directly below), drivers only stopped to let me cross a few times out of many hundreds of crossings.

By Texas law, unless a pedestrian is actually in the roadway a driver is not required to yield the right of way. Even when a person on foot is in the roadway and has the right of way, drivers often continue toward them at full speed, using intimidation to get someone walking to move out of their way.

Texas Transportation Code Sec. 552.003. PEDESTRIAN RIGHT-OF-WAY AT CROSSWALK.

  1. The operator of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing a roadway in a crosswalk if:
    1. no traffic control signal is in place or in operation; and
    2. the pedestrian is:
      1. on the half of the roadway in which the vehicle is traveling; or
      2. approaching so closely from the opposite half of the roadway as to be in danger.
  2. Notwithstanding Subsection (a), a pedestrian may not suddenly leave a curb or other place of safety and proceed into a crosswalk in the path of a vehicle so close that it is impossible for the vehicle operator to yield.
Poor sightlines at crosswalk
Poor sightlines at crosswalk

poor-sightlines-crosswalk-2

The view of vehicles approaching East Riverside from Lakeshore is obscured by trees planted near the corner of the AMLI building (above). Getting a clear view can mean leaning out into the road. Drivers traveling at 35+ mph approaching this corner are common, and they cannot be readily seen from this vantage point.

Drivers often round this corner at a relatively high speed. So much so that some drift out of the curb lane around the corner to be able to accommodate the speed (not seen in this instance below, but it happens regularly).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyWIk6IULqs

This video gives an indication of how difficult it is to see when it is safe to cross:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=crlc2RqtNqE

east-riverside-bDrivers proceeding onto Lakeshore from the left turn bay on East Riverside (e.g., the black car in the photo to the left) rarely yield to pedestrians in the roadway facing a lighted walk signal. This is the single worst location I have found between I35 and Pleasant Valley Road. I regularly have drivers cut past me on one side or the other as I am crossing as a pedestrian, blocking following drivers’ view of me.

The vast majority (90%+) of drivers making this turn either do not understand their requirement to yield to pedestrians in the crosswalk, choose to ignore it, or fail to look for a pedestrian.

When people are crossing the roadway with a lighted walk signal, it is not uncommon to have drivers accelerate their vehicles toward them, honk at them, shout obscenities, or do all three at once.

In the video below, it can be seen that I am in the far lane when a driver cuts past me within that lane. On the return crossing, a driver is aiming her car directly toward me, and I have to increase my pace to get out of her way. This video was taken within five minutes of being at this location—this is a common occurrence here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mask1VHMK4s

Texas Transportation Code Sec. 552.002. PEDESTRIAN RIGHT-OF-WAY IF CONTROL SIGNAL PRESENT.

  1. A pedestrian control signal displaying “Walk,” “Don’t Walk,” or “Wait” applies to a pedestrian as provided by this section.
  2. A pedestrian facing a “Walk” signal may proceed across a roadway in the direction of the signal, and the operator of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way to the pedestrian.
  3. A pedestrian may not start to cross a roadway in the direction of a “Don’t Walk” signal or a “Wait” signal. A pedestrian who has partially crossed while the “Walk” signal is displayed shall proceed to a sidewalk or safety island while the “Don’t Walk” signal or “Wait” signal is displayed.

east-riverside-cHeaded into this crosswalk (especially westbound, but the traffic to one’s back) carries with it the risk of being hit by a westbound driver making a right turn onto Lakeshore. Well less than 50% of drivers making this turn signal.

I once had to step back to avoid being hit by an Austin Police Department cruiser, the driver of which had not signaled his turn. I rarely try to cross here without waiting for a gap, knowing that drivers often don’t signal. It was foolish of me to trust that the officer would signal the turn. Sightlines here are poor unless one is positioned right next to Riverside (i.e., at the far left side of the crosswalk) prior to making the crossing.

This video gives an indication of the difficulty of seeing clearly, especially when a vehicle is pulling out of the parking lot upstream:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0t9nNDOC5o

Signs positioned around the curve on this stretch of roadway (indicating parking rules for the 7-Eleven lot) are often leaning at an angle into the path of pedestrians, posing a significant hazard.

On any return trip on foot from my apartment near Lakeshore Boulevard to the H-E-B grocery store at Pleasant Valley, I will have to walk around the back of at least three or four vehicles, and sometimes as many as six or seven.

Even when drivers look directly at someone whose sidewalk passage they are blocking, rarely will one back up to allow them to pass. Needless to say, walking behind a vehicle puts a person at risk of being hit by a car either turning into the road/driveway or backing up unexpectedly.

    

Texas Transportation Code Sec. 545.423. CROSSING PROPERTY.

  1. An operator may not cross a sidewalk or drive through a driveway, parking lot, or business or residential entrance without stopping the vehicle.
[Granted, this is a poorly worded section.]

Texas Transportation Code Sec. 552.006. USE OF SIDEWALK.
(c) The operator of a vehicle emerging from or entering an alley, building, or private road or driveway shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian approaching on a sidewalk extending across the alley, building entrance or exit, road, or driveway.

Fortunately, I was able to get a video of someone doing it just right. It happens, but not often:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moRokpi7nm4

Footer

  • Trigger an unresponsive traffic light on your bicycle.
  • Improve your daytime (and nighttime) visibility when riding your bicycle.
  • Be maneuverable, visible, predictable, and communicative on a bicycle in traffic
  • Move away from the curb to make yourself more visible & gain maneuverability.
  • Discourage the left cross in an intersection on your bicycle.
  • Pass parked cars on your bicycle without concern.
  • Cycling in neighborhood traffic

Terms & conditions


Privacy policy
Copyright info
© 2008–2025
The Center for Cycling Education