BOHMTE, Germany — When Ulrike Rubcic heard that her town would take down all of its traffic lights, she rolled her eyes in disbelief. Tucked between cornfields and cow meadows, the main street in this bucolic northern German community was also a thoroughfare with thousands of cars and trucks zooming to or from nearby Osnabruck. ‘Are we waiting for the first accident?’ she thought then. But this summer the town reworked its downtown thoroughfare, not only scrapping the traffic lights but also tearing down the curbs and erasing marked crosswalks. The busiest part of the main street turned into a ‘naked’ square shared equally by bikes, pedestrians, cars, and trucks. Now, there is only one rule: Always give way to the person on the right. Two months into the experiment, ‘Instead of thinking, ‘It’s going to be red, I need to give gas, people have to slow down, to look to the right and the left, to be considerate’ says Ms. Rubcic. The bonus? Town people recognize they have become a bit closer to one another. ‘The whole village has become more human. We look at each other, we greet each other,’ she says. In […]

Read the Full Article