dynamic LED traffic light by dennis van melick

dennis melick's innovative 'three to one traffic light' display for pedestrian and vehicle traffic
the 'three to one traffic display' by dutch industrial design student dennis van melick utilizes LED screens to offer realtime,
updatable traffic and lane information, even as they function as ordinary traffic lights. van melick is currently in talks
with production companies and city officials to potentially bring his patent-protected design and prototype to an urban trial.
the project was on exhibition during dutch design week 2011 at the design academy eindhoven's graduation show and
at the klockgebouw tower in the strijp-s zone of the city.
rather than relying on simply red, yellow, and green colours for information, the 'three to one' display makes use of unique
symbols for each designation, facilitating their use for the colourblind: a red square for 'stop', an orange triangle for 'slow',
and a green circle for 'go'. in addition, the signs can be dynamically converted to signify an emergency lane for the passage
of ambulances, fire, or police vehicles; to close a lane in the event of an accident or other obstacle ahead; or to designate a bus lane.
the signals themselves consist of a polycarbonate frame with a reflective border, in addition to the LED panel.
the system relies entirely on existent infrastructure: the screens can be affixed to existing traffic frames, and the information
to control their operation is already contained within the boxes inside existing poles, which already access many kinds of
wireless data that goes unused. the efficiency of LED lights saves electricity, while an innovative suspension system
makes installation easy and resistant to vandalism. because only the screen needs to be mounted, 'three to one' is easily
adaptable to both freestanding and hanging display modules.
'three to one traffic display' is just one part of a traffic control system designed by van melick.
read about his 'urban info display' units in this designboom article.

display of all possible screens for vehicle traffic

the 'slow down' light is a yellow-orange triangle

'open lane' indication

'closed lane' designation

this display depicts the speed that a driver should maintain in order to hit a green light at the next traffic stop

view of the device in use for pedestrian traffic
closer view

sketches and early concept diagrams

technical diagram of the device's construction
Additionally, I've got issues with the physical design. The density of LEDs is not high enough to clearly make several of the symbols you propose. They're going to look rather pixelated and distorted in actuality. Also, the LED grid is inefficient, spreading out beyond any of the symbols. If you're going to design something like this, the efficient use of resources has to be taken into account, and this has massive waste involved.
Very nice! ^)
http://www.yankodesign.com/2010/06/21/ square-cut-traffic-signs/
Just interesting to see how the ideas floating in the air go to different design of the head.
Well, everyone has his own result.
Here. I think the size and shape are solved very succinctly and gramatno. Perhaps agree with previous records about graphics.
Very good!
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