Roads that glow in the dark and could one day even charge
electric cars are set be introduced in the Netherlands.
'Smart Highways' unveiled last week at Dutch Design Week will
use the latest technologies in roads which their designers claim will be 'more
sustainable, safe and intuitive', the Daily Mail reported.
The companies behind the project said their goal is to turn
around the usual route of transport innovation by focusing on the highway
rather than the vehicles which use it.
Among the most ambitious of the ideas for the future of road
travel are special lanes which will allow drivers of electric cars to recharge
their vehicles as they travel along them.
Another plan is to fit the roads with power-saving lights
which will gradually brighten as vehicles approach and then switch themselves
off after they pass.
Those ideas are still some years off, but from next year
Dutch roads will be painted with lines made from a photo-luminescent powder
that charges in sunlight to illuminate the road for up to 10 hours overnight.
Another technology aimed for implementation next year is
temperature-responsive dynamic paint which will make ice-crystals visible to
drivers when cold weather makes road surfaces slippery.
The ideas - developed by Dutch firms Studio Roosegaarde and
Heijmans Infrastructure - have already been hailed as 'Best Future Concept' at
the Dutch Design Awards.
However, there is no information yet on how lanes which
recharge electric cars travelling among them might work.
"Innovative designs such as the Glow-in-the-Dark Road,
Dynamic Paint, Interactive Light, Induction Priority Lane and Wind Light will
be realised within the following five years," Studio Roosegarde said.
"The goal is to make roads that are more
sustainable and interactive by using interactive lights, smart energy and road
signs that adapt to specific traffic situations," it said.
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