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So what exactly is a roundabout? Erie Insurance defines it as “a circular street that loops around a raised central island.”
The purpose of roundabouts is to control the flow of traffic as all cars move around the roundabout in the same direction. A roundabout differs from a roundabout in that vehicles do not have to stop before entering a roundabout like a roundabout does.
Who invented the roundabout?
Columbus Circle in Manhattan is a famous roundabout | Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
The history of the roundabout is long – much longer than the history of the automobile. We can trace the use of roundabouts back to at least 18th-century Europe. For example, the famous Arc de Triomphe in Paris, which dates back to 1780, stands at the center of the busy Place Charles de Gaulle roundabout, also known as Place de l’Étoile.
It is not known exactly who invented the roundabout as a concept and where the first appeared. However, we do know that in 1777 the Marquis de Marigny completed massive streets at the intersection where Place Charles de Gaulle is today. It even still has streets paved in the shape of a star.
The first roundabout in the United States is Columbus Circle in New York City. American landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted designed this roundabout in 1857 as part of a larger plan for Central Park.
Because of this, circular intersections are safer than four-way stops
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