In the United Kingdom, emergency diversion routes, or formally off-network tactical diversion routes are permanently signed detour routes: planned road traffic routes that bypass the main trunk road network.
Emergency diversion routes provide the public, where possible, with a planned, checked and agreed junction to junction diversion route that circumnavigates an incident which has resulted in the closure of the main carriageway. In some other locations, suitable diversion routes are not possible; this then requires National Highways and its partners to implement alternative tactics such as strategic signs and signals. These are managed by the National Traffic Control Centre (NTCC).
Emergency diversion routes are marked with road signs in the form of simple geometric shapes – open and filled circles, squares, and diamonds. Normally, these additions to roadsigns will be ignored by drivers. The same symbols were introduced on Republic of Ireland roads in 2016 and first used there on the M50.
When an incident closes a motorway or trunk road, police and National Highways traffic officers can activate 'trigger signs' at junctions before a closure advising traffic as to which symbol to follow around the incident along an alternative road and bring road users back onto the motorway or main road at a later junction beyond the closure.
The signs used for these routes can be found in the publication Know your Traffic Signs.
Emergency diversion route symbols
Solid versions
Hollow versions
Related signs
- Diversion trigger sign – the M1 Motorway is closed ahead, follow the 'hollow diamond' diversion to arrive at back the M1 after the closure.
References
- Marshall, Chris. "Emergency Diversion Routes". Roads.org.uk. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
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- "Emergency Diversion Route Symbols" (PDF). Dublin: Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport. 2019.
- "The Meaning Behind Different Shapes On Motorway Signs". Chill Insurance. 29 October 2024.
- O'Brien, Tim (18 June 2019). "Squares, triangles, circles, diamonds: What are the new M50 signs all about?". The Irish Times. Retrieved 29 November 2024.
- "Know your traffic signs , page 107" (PDF). Department for Transport. 2007.
See also
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