Seagull intersection
Encyclopedia
A seagull intersection or continuous green-T intersection is a common type of three-way at-grade intersection, usually used on high traffic volume roads and dual carriageways. This form of intersection is popular in Australia and New Zealand, and sometimes used in the United States.

Design

Note: This section refers to countries driving on the left. For countries that drive on the right, reverse left and right.

Seagull intersections get their name from the pattern that the two right-turn lanes make when looking down from the air.

Seagull intersections allow one direction of traffic to travel straight through without stopping. Those wishing to turn right into the side road at the intersection simply bear right into a separate lane, which forms one 'wing' of the seagull. Here, they meet the opposite carriageway and the side road. Traffic wishing to turn right out of the side road, simply cross the intersecting carriageway and drive up the other 'wing' of the seagull, and merge onto the other carriageway.

Seagull intersections may have a second smaller seagull formed by two left turning lanes into and out of the side road.

Different methods are used to control traffic where two right-turning movements and the through movement meet. Most intersections use traffic lights, while others use Give Way and Stop signs, and sometimes roundabouts.

New Zealand

  • Paul Matthews Road - Upper Harbour Highway (State Highway 18), North Shore, Auckland.
  • Ferguson Drive - River Road - Western Hutt Road intersection, Upper Hutt
    Upper Hutt
    Upper Hutt is a satellite city of Wellington. It is New Zealand's smallest city by population, the second largest by land area. It is in Greater Wellington.-Geography:Upper Hutt is 30 km north-east of Wellington...

    .
  • Western Hutt Road - Dowse Drive intersection, Lower Hutt
    Lower Hutt
    Lower Hutt is a city in the Wellington region of New Zealand. Its council has adopted the name Hutt City Council, but neither the New Zealand Geographic Board nor the Local Government Act recognise the name Hutt City. This alternative name can lead to confusion, as there are two cities in the...

    (closed 8 December 2007 to be replaced with a grade-separated interchange).
  • State Highway 1, near Porirua
  • Along the Waikato Expressway

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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