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    10 Kommentare

    1. Somebody might still walk there even if its 15km road.

      How about you slow down once in a while and then continue your 200km/h cruise.

    2. this photo was taken on a bridge between Utsera – Glola – Chiora. In the middle of the road, no houses no sidewalks just narrow roads.

      The closest village is 5.5km from the crossroad.

      I’m not making fun of you. I like this country very much It just doesn’t make any sense to me. Looks like some funding spending or money laundering.

    3. nem3isavailable on

      This pedestrian crossing marking was clearly designed for people capable of walking through fences and guardrails.

    4. Maybe because the workers that do the painting get paid by how much paint they use? lol

    5. It’s very simple, actually. The local government has a plan on how much they should spend on traffic improvement measures.
      They have to deliver something and they don’t care about how efficient the spending will be.

      20 pedestrian crossings made – check. Bonus points for painting those on narrowest roads possible and using extra paint for your own needs.

    6. maybe just maybe…………. it makes accidents less likely? all drivers slow down when seeing these lines on the road, its just before a turn so it makes sense.

    7. So if you would hit a pedestrian there you will be in the wrong in the court

    8. FunctionRegular3157 on

      If there’s a crash on this junction it allows for extra charges to laid against the driver who ignored the signs and markings for a pedestrian crossing. The law is the law.

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