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Block paved section on roundabouts
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Highways (Traffic Calming) Regulations 1993 - here - (an amendment to the Highways Act 1980) defines an 'overrun area' as 'an area of a carriageway so constructed of textured or coloured material as to appear to narrow that carriageway'.
These are intended to guide the majority of vehicles to use the reduced width carriageway whilst still allowing those incapable of such to utilise the overrun area.
This is similar to the operation of a mini-roundabout without the legally enforceable instruction given by the road markings painted on the road.
Mini-roundabouts are a different matter entirely.
This from the Highway Code states
"164: Mini-roundabouts Approach these in the same way as normal roundabouts. All vehicles MUST pass round the central markings except large vehicles which are physically incapable of doing so. Remember, there is less space to manoeuvre and less time to signal. Beware of vehicles making U-turns."
To deliberately and unnecessarily cross the painted road markings, as proscribed by the Traffic Signs Regulations & General Directions 2002 reg 10(1), 16(1), is a contravention of section 36 of the Road Traffic Act 1988.
Thanks kempie,
You have done some research, I know the painted mini roundabouts are legaly enforcable and you need to actualy go round them.
As I said there is no legal requirement to keep off textured or differently marked areas around roundabouts.
Many councils are trying to con motorists into doing things they want them to do by painting weird colours on the road because the government will not change the law. Things like the red central strips in the centre of the road, again these have no legal meaning.
This sort of conning just confuses the normal motorists and in some cases is actualy dangerous.
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