Andrew Boenau, a Richmond transportation engineer, is a big fan of roundabouts. In fact, he has participated in the design of two of Virginia’s 12 roundabouts — one on the Virginia Tech campus and one in Gloucester County. For anyone interested in finding out more about this unconventional traffic-management tool, he recommends visiting the website of Michael Wallwork, a world-renowned expert. Wallwork, who cut his teeth as a traffic engineer in Melbourne, Australia, and now lives in Orange Park, Fla., explores the abundant design possibilities.
As the photo above from Clearwater, Fla., (taken from Wallwork’s website) makes evident, roundabouts do more than manage traffic flow. They stand out as major landmarks. The circles create visual focal points, which can be amplified with fountains, statues, gardens or other civic ornamentation. And, oh, by the way, this Clearwater roundabout carries 58,000 cars a day and 8,000 pedestrians.
By Boenau’s count, the Richmond region is the lead adopter of roundabouts in Virginia. There are two in Richmond — including the magnificent circle on Monument Ave. with the Robert E. Lee statue — as well as one in Chesterfield County and three in the West Creek office park in Goochland County. Charlottesville is coming on strong with one roundabout and three under construction. Gordonsville, Blacksburg, Amherst, Gloucester and Winchester also sport roundabouts.
Update: Boenau has pointed me to this Virginia Tech web page with an aerial view of the university’s roundabout.


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