Traffic signalization is another tool of CSS designers seeking to adjust vehicle speeds and balance vehicle operating goals with the goals of adjacent communities.
This synthesis provides a review of the application of a number of different transit preferential
treatments in mixed traffic and offers insights into the decision-making process that
can be applied in deciding which preferential treatment might be the most applicable in a
particular location. The synthesis is offered as a primer on the topic area for use by transit
agencies, as well as state, local, and metropolitan transportation, traffic, and planning
agency staffs.
This synthesis is based on the results from a survey of transit and traffic agencies related
to transit preferential treatments on urban streets. Survey results were supplemented by a
literature review of 23 documents and in-depth case studies of preferential treatments in
four cities—San Francisco, Seattle, Portland (Oregon), and Denver. Eighty urban area transit
agencies and traffic engineering jurisdictions in the United States and Canada were contacted
for survey information and 64 (80%) responded. One hundred and ninety-seven individual
preferential treatments were reported on survey forms. In addition, San Francisco
Muni identified 400 treatments just in its jurisdiction.