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Updated: July 8th, 2008 05:26 PM EDT

Concrete Crossings Offer Safety and Subdued Style

Concrete applicaitons

Step-Safe tiles
The chocolate brown Step-Safe tiles installed throughout Hilton Head Island meet both ADA detectable warning surface requirements and the public’s desire for earth-toned design elements in the community.

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By: Darrin A. Shoemaker, P.E.

Nearly two years ago, Town of Hilton Head Island, S.C., officials realized that ongoing efforts to upgrade existing pedestrian crossings to ensure compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) detectable warning surface requirements left something to be desired.

The Town maintains a 50-mile public multi-use pathway system that is heavily used by the island's residents and visitors. The bright yellow flexible surfaces being applied to the asphalt pathway approaches to road crossings were considered incompatible with the Town's efforts to emphasize natural earth-tone hues in its design practices. Citizens and public officials complained about the intrusive "bath mats" that were being installed.

In response, town officials decided to investigate alternatives and found Transpo Industries' Step-Safe Detectable Warning Tiles through Traffic Distributor Links, Inc. The Town was attracted to the variety of colors available, the ease of installation and the durability afforded. Design professionals worked with a number of citizen committees to identify the chocolate brown color as the preferred color.

In order to accommodate the ADA-required level of contrast and simplify the logistical problems associated with attempting to retrofit existing pedestrian crossings, the Town hired a contractor to replace existing asphalt on pathway approaches with portland cement concrete pre-formed to accept the inlaid Step-Safe tiles and grouting material.

City officials identified Coligny Circle, a large roundabout intersection that serves as the terminus for a number of arterial streets in Hilton Head Island's most popular beach area for visitors, as a suitable pilot project. Three of the arterial streets had existing pathway crossings marked just outside the outer edge of the circle. The Town had recently designed and constructed raised median islands to serve as pedestrian refuges at the crossings and offset the crossings by installing railings within the refuge areas in order to afford improved sight distance. The refuge islands were constructed with a light-colored oyster-shell aggregate concrete. Subsequently, existing concrete within the islands was removed and re-poured to accommodate the Step-Safe tiles inlaid flush into the concrete surface.

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