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[[Image:Culs-de-sac aerial.jpg|right|thumb|Two culs-de-sac of [[Condominium (housing)|condominiums]] in a rural area near [[Atlanta]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]]]
[[Image:Culs-de-sac aerial.jpg|right|thumb|Two culs-de-sac of [[Condominium (housing)|condominiums]] in a rural area near [[Atlanta]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]]]


A '''cul-de-sac''' is a french word for '''dead end''', '''close''', '''no through road''' (UK English) or '''court''' (American and Australian English) meaning dead-end street with only one inlet/outlet. While historically built for other reasons, its modern use is to calm vehicle traffic.
A '''cul-de-sac''' is a word of French origin referring to a '''dead end''', '''close''', '''no through road''' (UK English) or '''court''' (American and Australian English) meaning dead-end street with only one inlet/outlet. While historically built for other reasons, its modern use is to calm vehicle traffic.


==Function==
==Function==

Revision as of 04:19, 8 December 2009

"Dead End Street" redirects here. For the song by The Kinks, see Dead End Street (song).
A cul-de-sac in Sacramento, California
A cul-de-sac in Alicante, Spain
Two culs-de-sac of condominiums in a rural area near Atlanta, Georgia

A cul-de-sac is a word of French origin referring to a dead end, close, no through road (UK English) or court (American and Australian English) meaning dead-end street with only one inlet/outlet. While historically built for other reasons, its modern use is to calm vehicle traffic.

Function

In urban planning culs-de-sac are created to limit through-traffic in residential areas. While some culs-de-sac provide no possible passage except in and out of their road entry, others allow cyclists, pedestrians or other non-automotive traffic to pass through connecting easements or paths.

In traffic engineering parlance, the cul-de-sac defines the local street as having primarily an 'access' (to properties) function rather than as one having a 'transport' or 'through' function.

Suburban use

Since the end of World War II,[1] new subdivisions in the United States have made extensive use of the cul-de-sac. Typically, there is one or several central roads in the subdivision, with many culs-de-sac of varying length branching out from the main roads, to fill all of the land in the subdivision. There are only a few roads (relative to the number of culs-de-sac) leading out of the subdivision, usually into other subdivisions or onto major roads. These changes can be attributed to real-estate developers' desire to meet FHA guidelines and make federal home loans available to their consumers.[2]

This is in contrast to early 20th century American urban planning which emphasized a grid layout, partially out of wide reliance on streetcars, and alleys.

The use of culs-de-sac reduces the amount of car traffic on residential streets within the subdivision, thus reducing noise and, allegedly, the potential for accidents. This, in turn, is thought to decrease crime and increase desirability, because in most cases the people who traverse the cul-de-sac either live there or are guests of those who do. Real estate developers like culs-de-sac because they allow builders to fit more houses into oddly shaped tracts of land, and facilitate building to the edges of rivers and property lines.[1] Culs-de-sac also facilitate gated communities, because of the small number of entrances.

Houses on culs-de-sac may be popular with some buyers, who, according to one study, might pay a 20% premium for such a home.[1] This could be because there is considerably less passing traffic, resulting in less noise and more desirable place to live.

Criticisms

A cul-de-sac sign in Dublin, Ireland.

Culs-de-sac are heavily criticised by urban designers like those of the Foundation for the Built Environment in the United Kingdom for encouraging car transport for even short distances, as more direct connections are cut off by the dead-end geometry which requires long travel distances even to physically nearby locations. This increases fuel consumption and vehicle emissions and has negative effects on health by reducing walking and cycling rates.[3] Related research in the United States by Richard Jackson has shown that people in car-based (cul-de-sac heavy) communities weigh on average 6 lb (2.7 kg) more than those in traditional towns (with more open grid networks).[3]

Culs-de-sac - especially those which also cut off pedestrian connections instead of limiting only road traffic - have also been criticised for negative effects on safety, because they decrease the amount of through traffic (vehicular or pedestrian) that might spot an accident or crime victim in need of help. Proponents of culs-de-sac and gated communities have in turn countered that the reduction in through traffic makes any "stranger" much more recognisable in the closed local environment, and thus reduces crime danger. This view has in turn been attacked as unrealistic; it is argued that since only a very small proportion of all non-locals passing through the area are potential criminals, increased traffic should increase rather than decrease safety.[4]

More generally, the New Urbanism movement has offered criticism of the cul-de-sac and other streets not intended to network with each other. It has been suggested that such street layouts can cause increased traffic on the non-cul-de-sac streets, make navigation (especially on foot) inconvenient and non-intuitive, and reduce the size of any given neighbourhood to a single street. This applies especially to back-to-front housing where the front of the house fronts onto the cul-de-sac lane while the rear fronts onto the main roads. Some of these problems can be mitigated by the newer practice of connecting the neighbouring roads and culs-de-sac with public pedestrian/cycle paths. In effect, this removes the cul-de-sac aspect for these modes of transport. Built examples of such connected culs-de-sac can be found in the United States (e.g., Radburn, New Jersey and Village Homes, California), England (e.g. Town of Milton Keynes), and Greece (e.g. Papagou, suburb of Athens). A new system for organizing connected culs-de-sac, the Fused Grid, has been developed by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.

Another concern is often raised by emergency services, who can have difficulty locating streets when a community consists of a large number of similarly-named culs-de-sac; also, large fire response vehicles, in particular, can have great difficulty with turning around in a cul-de-sac.

School buses can also have a hard time turning around, which means that children who live in a cul-de-sac must often walk to a bus stop on a main through road. However, recent research on obesity and urban planning suggests that this may be an advantage because it enables children to get daily physical activity. Longer walking distances, however, reduce interest to use buses especially when a car is available.

For these reasons, some U.S. cities including Austin, Texas; Charlotte, North Carolina; and Portland, Oregon have all but banned construction of new cul-de-sac-based suburbs.[1]

Terminology

The word "cul-de-sac" and its variants, "dead end" and "no exit", have inspired metaphorical uses in literature and in culture, often with the result that a word or phrase seeming to have a negative connotation is replaced in street signs. ("No outlet" is another alternative name used on street signs.)

Despite seeming to be a borrowed French phrase, the expression cul-de-sac originated in England during the period when French was spoken by the English aristocracy. In French, "cul-de-sac" literally means "bottom of a bag". J. R. R. Tolkien used the name Bag End as a literal translation of "cul-de-sac," to poke fun at the British use of French terms.[5]

French language

Cul-de-sac sign in Belgium

For signage, European countries use a graphic symbol somewhat like a "T" with a red top, rather than a sign with words. Some roadsigns in France also bear the additional inscription voie sans issue (literally "way without exit"). The word "cul-de-sac", referring to a dead end, is used informally in Europe (rarely officially since it is a mild profanity). In French-speaking Canada, the word "cul-de-sac" is used on signage.[1] Street naming conventions use the word impasse.

Diderot, in Jacques the Fatalist, uses the phrase impasse à la voltaire referring to the fact that Voltaire considered cul-de-sac as really rude and advised to use impasse instead:

«Lecteur, si je faisais ici une pause, et que je reprisse l'histoire de l'homme à une seule chemise, parce qu'il n'avait qu'un corps à la fois, je voudrais bien savoir ce que vous en penseriez? Que je me suis fourré dans une "impasse" à la Voltaire, ou vulgairement dans un cul-de-sac, d'où je ne sais comment sortir.»

"Reader, if I have put a pause here, and that I continued the story of the man with a lone shirt, because he had only one body at any one time, I would like to know what you would think? That I lost myself in an "impasse" à la Voltaire, or vulgarly a cul-de-sac, from which I don't know how to leave."

English language

U.S. 2004 edition of standard traffic signs [6] (sign W14-1)

In Canada, "no exit" is prevalent, and the word is preferred for Chicago signs, although "dead end" is still used there. In the UK, street signs more often display cul-de-sac rather than an English translation, or "no through road". U.S. Federal Highway Administration rules state: "The Dead End sign may be used at the entrance of a single road or street that terminates in a dead end or cul-de-sac. The No Outlet sign may be used at the entrance to a road or road network from which there is no other exit." There is no federal regulation on "no exit".[7]

Culs-de-sac may also be called "no through roads", especially in Australia where they are signposted as "No Through Road".[8]

United States regional variants

People from areas of the Southern United States sometimes refer to culs-de-sac as coves.[citation needed] All culs-de-sac in Memphis, Tennessee, for example, are referred to as coves and even carry that designation on the street signs. However, the use of the term cove to refer to culs-de-sac is not prevalent in the remaining parts of the state.

New York City has favored "dead end" since at least the 1930s, when Sidney Kingsley used the phrase to title his Broadway play about poor, tough East Side youths with lives of little promise, in contrast to the nearby dead-end streets of the nearby Sutton Place neighborhood. (Similarly, French existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre titled a play about three damned sinners, Huis Clos, translated into English as "No Exit".) Kingsley's play, later made into a movie, Dead End, which proved so popular that it spawned similar movies, many starring a group of recurring characters known as the Dead End Kids. The play and movies created such a strong image of bleak futures and an unfair society that some municipalities changed the sign terminology for culs-de-sac, often to "no outlet" or "no exit." (The "dead end" signs currently at Sutton Place are bright yellow with black lettering.)[7]

In New York City, as of 2008, there were 4,659 "dead end" traffic signs, along with 160 "no outlet" signs. The city records, which go back to the 1960s, show only a couple "no exit" signs once existing near the approaches to the Midtown Tunnel, and which are no longer there. "We hear that some towns use 'no outlet' instead of 'dead end' because they think it sounds less morbid," New York City Commissioner of Transportation Janette Sadik-Khan said in 2008. "We tell New Yorkers the truth: it's a 'dead end', and we think that motorists get the point quickly."[7]

Other uses

In military parlance, a "cul-de-sac" refers to a situation where an army is "hemmed in on all sides but behind"[9] "Cul-de-sac" is also used metaphorically to mean a line of thought or action which leads nowhere.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d NPR: Culs-de-Sac: Suburban Dream or Dead End?
  2. ^ NRHP Workshop @ NCSHPO Annual Meeting - Suburban Landscapes
  3. ^ a b Charles: let’s kill off the cul-de-sac - The Sunday Times, February 11, 2007
  4. ^ Can Streets Be Made Safe? - Hillier, Bill; Bartlett School of Graduate Studies, University College London
  5. ^ Tom Shippey, The Road to Middle-Earth.
  6. ^ U.S. Department of Transportation
  7. ^ a b c Safire, William (2008-07-13). "On Language: Dead End". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-12-04.
  8. ^ No Through Road (Flickr image used as reference)
  9. ^ OED, online edition, draft revision December 2007, entry for cul-de-sac, n2