Sister blog of Physicists of the Caribbean in which I babble about non-astronomy stuff, because everyone needs a hobby

Wednesday 11 April 2018

Not every experiment is worthwhile

It was an idea to improve road safety: special strips on the asphalt would play a tune when cars drove over them at the correct speed. But residents of a nearby village in the Netherlands said the constant noise was driving them mad. One called it "psychological torture". Another said cars were going faster to see if the song played at double speed. After pressure, officials closed the "singing road" on Tuesday, just one day after it had been officially opened.

The sound was created when cars drove over strategically-laid rumble strips, which are usually deployed at the side of roads to warn drivers against veering off. But it quickly became clear that locals were not singing the same tune. "I'm going nuts. You can't sit outside and you can't sleep at night," Sijtze Jansma told RTL News. Ria Jansma told Reuters news agency: "Last Saturday night, taxis... tried to go across the lines as quickly as possible and we had the anthem playing all night at high speed."

The strips on a stretch of the N357 road had been installed on Friday and cost €80,000 (£69,800; $99,000), including the expenses for their removal, a spokesman for Friesland province told the BBC. "It was an experiment on how to influence the behaviour of drivers. I was there myself and if you're living there it was unpleasant. The idea is good, but a lot of people said it was a lot of noise, that they couldn't sleep anymore... Now it will be quiet and people will enjoy life again."

Pffft, literally no-one likes being forced to music they didn't choose and can't turn off. Silly experiment. Give me €80,000 and I'll analyse HI data very quietly and occasionally turn up with some pretty pictures. A much better use of everyone's time, I'm sure.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-43725796

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