is a place where two or more roads either meet or cross. The main types of road junctions are
. A road junction may also be called a
. A junction between 3 road segments (arms) is a
(two arms form one road) or a Y-junction.
is an undesirable situation in which traffic veering right and traffic veering left must cross paths within a limited distance. Weaving creates both safety and capacity problems.
Interchanges
A highway interchange is a road junction that utilizes grade separation, and one or more ramps, to permit traffic on at least one road to pass through the junction without crossing any other traffic stream. A complete interchange has enough ramps to provide access from any direction of any road in the junction to any direction of any other road in the junction. A complete interchange between two freeways requires 8 ramps. A complete interchange between a freeway and another road (not a freeway) requires 4 ramps.
Types of interchanges between two freeways
- A cloverleaf is a two-level interchange in which left turns are handled by loop ramps. To go left, vehicles first pass either over or under the other road, then bear right onto a one-way ramp that loops 270 degrees to the right and then merges onto the intersecting road. (In countries where cars drive on the left, this would be a right turn.) The major advantage of cloverleafs is that they are relatively inexpensive. A major problem with cloverleafs is weaving (see definition of weaving, above).
- A stack is an interchange in which left turns are handled by semi-directional flyover ramps. In order to go left, vehicles first turn slightly right (on a 'right-turn' ramp), then go left on a ramp which goes over (or under) both freeways and connects to the 'right-turn' ramp in the opposite quadrant of the interchange. Stacks don't suffer from the problem of weaving associated with cloverleafs, but stacks are expensive.
- A cloverstack (half cloverleaf, half stack) is an interchange in which left turns are handled by two loop ramps and two semi-directional flyover ramps. A cloverstack avoids the weaving problem associated with cloverleafs, without the expense of a full stack. Cloverleafs are sometimes converted to cloverstacks (by eliminating 2 loop ramps and replacing them with two flyover ramps). Such a conversion improves the capacity and safety of the interchange.
- Directional interchange
- hybrids, variations and rare types
Types of interchanges between a freeway and a non-freeway road
- Diamond
- Folded diamond (sometimes called a 4-ramp parclo)
- a "six ramp parclo" is the same as a folded diamond, except that there are right-turn ramps in what would otherwise be unused quadrants.
- Single Point Urban Interchange (also called "SPUI", "single point diamond", or "X-interchange").
- SPDI (Single Point Directional Interchange) - identical to a SPUI except that it uses directional ramps.
- Roundabout interchange
- Single roundabout interchange (or SRI) - uses one roundabout which spans the freeway (either above or below the freeway)
- Roundabout diamond is a conventional diamond except that it uses roundabouts rather than signals or stop signs where the ramps meet the non-freeway road.