I love roundabouts, except for the morons who feelt he need to stop, look both ways and edge out into the circle. There are a few in RI near the shoreline and some in Mass. But I don't see many in CT. I know up in Saratoga, NY there are a few big ones right by 87 which makes it SOOOOO much easier to get around instead of waiting at lights.In Bermuda they have like two street lights, everything else on the island is a roundabout. Loved it! As for me, there was one put into place in the town next to mine. Small one with 3 entryways. My god people are stupid here. They stop and won't go when they see someone entering from the other side. Like they think it is one car at a time only. The whole point is that when there is no opposing traffic entering you can glide in and out easily. It's not a hard rule, once in the circle you have the right of way. I can agree with this post that most American's are clueless with rotaries, myself excluded. As a matter of fact, here is a picture I found of the exact Roundabout I am talking about in my neighboring town.And here is the literature on the town's website, apparently this is the first roundabout on a CT state road.The state Department of Transportation has completed the construction of the Oyster River roundabout at routes 162 and 705.The project, which is being done in conjunction with the city, involves the construction of the first modern roundabout, or traffic circle, on a state road at the intersection of Jones Hill Road and Ocean Avenue. Roundabouts are one-way circular intersections where traffic flows to the right around a central island at low speeds, which, when constructed at appropriate locations, results in significantly lower accident rates.Traffic entering a roundabout is required to yield to pedestrians and circulating traffic, which has the right of way, but otherwise does not have to stop, thereby reducing congestion, fuel consumption and pollution. For more details on the operation of roundabouts, including a two-minute traffic simulation video, visit the DOT’s Web site below. The video is divided into three visual segments: yield to pedestrians, all traffic stays right and yield to traffic in the roundabout.Link to a DOT video on roundabouts LOL!
http://www.conndot.ct.gov/medi...ation