States aim to help traffic flow with ‘zipper merge'
Transportation departments in Missouri and Kansas have joined Minnesota and Washington in urging drivers to use the “zipper merge” method when approaching lane closures, most often associated with road work.
Using all available lanes until the last moment, then alternating entry into the open lane, helps reduce accidents by keeping both lanes moving at the same speed, said David Silvester, a Missouri Department of Transportation engineer.
“This isn't rocket science,” he said. “It's easy.”
The goal is to change a mindset among drivers whose first instinct is to get in line as soon as they see a sign warning of closed lanes ahead, Silvester said. For those folks, drivers who buzz past in the lane that is ending and crowd back into line at the last second are considered inconsiderate.
Dwight Hennessy, a psychology professor at Buffalo State College in New York who specializes in traffic psychology, said Midwesterners tend to be polite and follow the rules — even unwritten ones — and get upset when others don't. “When a rule is being violated by someone else, it frustrates us, it irritates us, it makes us angry,” Hennessy said.
While motorists in other states might be accustomed to using some informal form of the zipper merge, four states have officially championed the technique.
Missouri officials started promoting the idea earlier this year ahead of what was expected to be a heavy road construction season. One of the bigger bottlenecks begins this month, when traffic on Interstate 70 west of Boonville in central Missouri will be reduced to one lane in each direction because of bridge repairs, Silvester said.
Kansas has taken a more deliberate approach that includes using electronic signs and measuring the pace of traffic flow with Doppler radar.
Minnesota began promoting the zipper merge in the early 2000s with something it called “dynamic late merge.” That system relies on sensors that activate portable electronic signs when traffic is congested and there are lane closures ahead.
The state later changed the name of that method to “active zipper merge” because the term “late merge” had negative connotations, said Ken Johnson, a state work zone engineer.
In late 2007, Minnesota tried using a “passive zipper merge” system that uses permanent signs — but no electronic ones — to tell motorists of an upcoming lane reduction and encourage them to use both lanes. That version was slow to catch on, Johnson said, and in 2011 Minnesota transportation officials launched a campaign to educate drivers about how the merge works. “We've struggled for a long time with what to do with merging behavior during lane reductions,” Johnson said.