Or the traffic needs x number of lanes to flow properly and only x-1 lane width space is available at some point, but there is room to peel off one lane and send it in another direction before meeting back up after the restriction.
I don t think it s really magic since it take a lot space and force users to turn many times so wasting time that s the reason why people build these huge and expensive projects
Wow 100,000 views! Thank you so much guys. If you're on desktop PC, you might want to enjoy my latest effort in creating new TH-cam genre here: th-cam.com/video/bLEC_TExGoE/w-d-xo.html
@@michaellee91 I guess it assumes (probably rightfully so) that more people will recognize the Eiffel tower, thus being in Europe rather than the Arc the Triomphe
@@PopeLando Priority to the right is not applied to French roundabouts, except to the Arc de Triomphe one. I drove it many times and it is a very unique challenge. Actually it is not that tough, but you need to stay focused on what you are surrounded by. Beside that case, priority to the right is a good rule. You just have to get the habit. For a French, it is natural and we never complain about it.
FYI if you want to reduce inner city traffic, Stockholm solved that problem: inner city car travel tolls. Also, if you want public transport to be safer, maybe having an anonymous Air Marshal type roll on random buses would greatly help
As for #4 Oyamazaki Interchange, previously the main expressway (Meishin Expressway) was normal dual carriageway. However, congestion became so severe by 1990s that Japan Highway Public Cooperation decided to build another dual carriageway and make it quad carriageway (2+2 for westbound, 2+2 for eastbound). The construction was completed in 1998. Still, the expressway is congested since it connects Osaka, Kyoto, and Nagoya, so another route is under construction which is called Shin-Meishin to bypass the old route.
At #4, the two "unnecessary" branches that lead to the same destination are in fact a very clever way to unclog the way to the destination. Cars are split in two branches and are moving instead of forming a line and clogging the whole system. Very smart.
Yeah, and also one of them is a single purpose thru branch, while the other one is needed to get down to and up from the toll booth. (It' a bit like saying "three of the four leaves in a clover leaf are unneccessary, because you could just take the turn directly.")
Wow, two routes that lead to the same place... it's a shame the engineers didn't post the design on TH-cam and get the opinion of the comments section before it was approved.
2:522:522:52 2:522:522:52 「The trick behind Oyamazaki JCT」 th-cam.com/video/57tBxrdxQWs/w-d-xo.html Unfortunately, almost users didn't know this way because of Car navigation and the complexity of 2nd way. Sorry for my bad English! p.s. this page is so easy to understand www.w-nexco.co.jp/search/jct_map/oyamazaki/
The Magic Roundabout, despite looking intimidating, is actually rather simple. You just follow the lines and give way to the right. Possibly up to 5 times in quick succession.
I lived in NOVA and drove the “spaghetti bowl” in Springfield very frequently. The new one is a great improvement over the old one. The biggest headache is if you’re not in the correct lane by the time you’re in the midst and traffic is heavy (and it’s almost always so) you either try to do what many tourists do: slow (or even stop for heaven’s sake) or try a last second lane swerve across six lanes of traffic. If you are planning on driving this road and you’re unfamiliar with the roads, either use and follow your GPS or know in advance which road will take you to your destination and stick to it.
This is very true, as I deal with this interchange five days a week. I am somewhat surprised another that I have gone through is not on the list, and that is the US 75/I-635 interchange in Dallas, Texas.
@0:21 - yes, it looks mad from above but when you're actually driving on it (as I do most weeks), you'd hardly even realise; it's pretty straightforward.
2:50 => Actually it perfectly makes sense to have two routes flowing through each direction. Most of the interchange is only one lane. Having two routes flowing through a central roundabout removes the need to change lanes to change direction. The track starts at the 3 lane straight away. One lane for each approach direction (side, top and bottom). Instead of changing lanes each lane splits into two directions each. Lane 1 is fed by the top and the roundabout, then splits into into the roundabout or goes out the side. Lane 2 is fed by the bottom and the roundabout, and splits into the roundabout or goes out the side. Lane 3 is the roundabout is fed by the side and goes out the top or bottom. It's completely modular. They can section off any point or even the entire central ring (let's say... to have a race) and the freeway would still work.
When the Sprinfield Interchange in Virginia first opened, there was a winter storm. The road crews didn't de-ice all of the new surfaces. Among the hundreds trapped during the height of the storm was a school bus. It took some 12 hours to free them.
nice background music, straight to the point, interesting, no small talk or extra parts that make the video annoying, just a nice simple list. 10/10 top 10 video
Almost all of these are actually interchanges rather thuan intersections, and the grammar was iffy but, aside from from the Italian one you didn’t show very well, they were interesting to see and well shown.
Golden Glades Interchange in Miami. Six major expressways come together plus three major surface streets within a mile. Make sure your affairs are in order.
I have driven on number 1. Didnt even know it was there until i approached it and thought wtf do i do here lol its a roundabout of roundabouts and surprisingly has a great safety record as everyone goes slow due to confusion lol
I also stumbled onto it while driving before I knew about it, on a rainy, busy Friday rush hour cross country drive, and it definitely caused some initial confusion as I worked out what to do. But it works out alright in the end, we're pretty used to roundabouts here in the UK
I'm aware the difficulty but you don't want to hear me narrating and using text-to-speech audio would be terrible either. For now this is the way I choose to deliver. I'm sorry if you are not comfortable watching my videos. When its economically feasible enough, I will hire good narrator for my channel.
I think what he means is maybe try to lengthen the time before you show a new section (bridge in this case) as i even found myself pausing as i wanted to see the pictures and read before it changed. wasn't that bad, but think would help.
I lived in Springfield, VA from 1966 to 1975 and remember this interchange--just outside S'field. It is I-95, I-495 aka the Beltway, and I-395 ( which was just part of 95 in my day ).
Interestingly, Swindon's Magic Roundabout also has redundant paths just like the Oyamazaki interchange, the idea being alternate paths in case the other way is congested.
#10 gravelly hill 0:19 #09 gate tower building osaka japan 0:38 #08 judge harry pregerson interchange los angeles, usa 1:07 #07 nanpu bridge, shanghai, china 1:29 #06 porta maggiore, roma, italia 1:52 #05 springfield interchange, virginia, usa 2:12 #04 oyamazaki interchange, osaka, japan 2:28 #03 arc de triomphe cercle, paris, france 2:59 #02 Yanan interchange, shanghai, china 3:22 #01 magic roundabout, swindon, england 3:43
#5 the Springfield Interchange, is also located at the end of some of the worst traffic in the country. Just South of it is I-95, the only highway anywhere near that takes you South (Fredricksburg, Richmond) from the North (DC, Baltimore). DC to Baltimore has 3 highways but DC South only has 1.
Fun fact on #3 Arc de Triomphe: every five minutes or so there is a 10-20 second gap when no traffic is coming from any of the 12 side avenues and you can try and quickly run across to the Arc in the center (instead of taking the foot tunnel). Try at your own risk and best not when a Gendarme is nearby.
FYI: the thumbnail photo is of the High Five interchange in Dallas, Texas. If you’re going to use that photo, you might want to include it in your video.
@@SianaGearz People that comment on the spelling/grammar of the video have given data that indeed, people are watching: if they don't react, did they really watch it? :D
That "streetbuilding" is in Umeda Osaka in Japan. The construcktion of the tower startet already when the Streetplaning realice they MUST have a Highwayramp there to be able to handle the upcoming Trafic.The owner of that plot was be forced to sell his lot and get a refound for his expenses and he refused it. so the ONLY solution was to build the ramp trugh the building. AND here is the funny part. The City of Osaka Pay a Monthley rent for 5 Flors on that Building for as long that ramp exists. YES 5 Floors for fire safty reasions the floors over and under the street is unusable as well.
I live kinda close to the Springfield Interchange or as we call it "The Mixing Bowl" and I had always thought that it was pretty much normal and that there was at least one in every city but I was surprised to see it in this video and I guess a little proud.😁🚗🚙
Over the past week, ending November 23, global stock indices showed a negative trend. The focus of investors was the political situation in the European…e-fin.top
2:53 On the branch that has the loop, it connects to other routes of traffic. That traffic, if they choose to eventually turn onto the route going to the bottom-left corner, that branch becomes necessary for them.
Can't help traffic is fundamentally flawed in that game. And if you want to use industries buildings with basic roads and no traffic manager mod good luck. Base game won't even let you set intersection types
2:40 if a dude in cities skylines made that intersection people on youtube would comment "LUL NUB wtf u building? what mess is this? haha look at this guy, he doesnt know what he's doing"
Actually the rest of the world drives on the wrong side of the road, it's been proven that driving on the left is safer and better. The driver of the vehicle is sat on the right hand side giving better control of the vehicle when changing gear, using the radio etc. most people are right handed so their right hand will be on the steering wheel when using the vehicles functions.
There's a weird and huge 5 way tollway interchange west of Chicago serving interstate 88/IL 110, interstate 290, and interstate 294, as well as partial connections to IL 38 and surface streets. It's a weird hybrid of 6 partial interchanges smashed into one junction
Yeah, that's the tooth. Probably because of all the drilling they do in Texas. And all that ice and snow can leave motorists filling like they've just had a root canal.
The "Magic Roundabout " in Swindon is not the only example of this type of interchange, as there is also another such interchange, (also known locally as the "magic roundabout!") in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, with an identical layout and the same number of roads but the traffic on the roundabout travels in both directions, clockwise and anti-clockwise! It looks like a nightmare to navigate but is actually quite easy!
I like to nominate the Bruckner Interchange in NY for honorable mention. It was initially finished in 1972 and it solved one of the worst traffic congestion areas anywhere at the time. A second 1.8 billion dollar project for the Bruckner is nearly finished. It fixes a couple of bridges and the hunt point market access as well as numerous local access.
5 minute of Google-Fu meditation reveals that it's a myth, but insurance companies do handle it in a special way - they split damages evenly, because it's near impossible to determine fault and lengthy litigations just drain their money.
I went there at 3am on a Sunday night, when the roads were empty. What could possibly go wrong, I thought. Now's my chance to drive around that infamous roundabout, stress free. Utterly terrifying about halfway round, when cars and busses started piling on from a side road in front of me. Never again!
It's priority given to the entering driver, like a lot of places in Paris. Just FYI, priority on the right applies when there are no road sign and, oh! no road sign at Etoile! Fun fact, there is only one stop in the whole city ;) As for insurance, no matter the place, accident in a roundabout is almost all the time a 50/50 issue.
Rudy Steiner roundabouts are most efficient on A-Roads or in suburbs (really small roundabouts) anything more than a Dual Carriageway usually has a problem with roundabouts, i.e motorways rely on intersections.
Actually, if you knew how roundabouts worked, you'd understand they're very successful at keeping traffic flowing. What fucks them up is people approaching, instead of properly merging into the flowing traffic, they STOP!!! They sit there and wait for an opening. That's way roundabouts have no red, yellow and green LIGHTS! You're not supposed to STOP! Very simple process but most drivers don't understand or even know the proper theory of operation of something as simple as a non-moving part roundabout! "Look! No red, yellow and green lights! What do I do? STOP for Christ's sake!" Blithering idiots, you included. You should have known.
You try to merge into traffic in a roundabout Western Washington without waiting for an opening you will get hit by another car. People in this state are jealous of their position in traffic and leave precisely three feet of clearance between them and the car in front of them.
That "three feet" goes nationwide. I'm "Old School". I refuse to tailgate and always let someone in...as long as they signal their intention! Tailgaters get their windshield "washed" by me. Just turn my wipers on high and hit the fluid. Pisses people off! Me? I wouldn't mind. Hell, free wash and saves my fluid!
This list is irrelevant considering the fact that you can find all of the worlds craziest interchanges in one city. Houston has some of the best roadways in the world. There are seven 5-stack interchanges on beltway eight alone. Edit: I amend my initial statement to say that this list is a good list of unique interchanges.
The Springfield interchange is a vast improvement over the original design, separating through from local traffic and eliminating a very dangerous merge/exit point for I95 and the DC beltway.
My brother from the mid-West visited me and had to drive through the Springfield Mixing Bowl for the first time. He said it was a "white knuckle ride" and that his GPS lit up like a Christmas tree....lol.
Imagine hearing from your gps:
In 500 meters *good luck*
Why I laughed so hard at this?
Imagine driving through this with NO GPS?
GOOD LUCK!
Or Gordon ramsay doing the GPS voice on one of these
Genius lol
Lolololololololololololololololololololololololololol
I like how the UK solves their traffic jam problems with adding multiple mini roundabouts to a larger roundabout.
I just looks stupid. But if it really works is actually genial.
@@pistolet-pulemetshpagin4198 it works by discouraging people going through there
Never seen Biffa huh?
yeah it's very confusing and overcomplicating things
@@mayhare55555 Well it is Swindon so really you can't discourage people any more..
2:51 different lanes to the same final destination have one simple purpose, all over the world: One lane goes directly, one allows for interchanging.
Of course.0
I also believe the lanes that don’t go directly to the destination pass through a toll booth
@@cheese_wafflez533 not necessarily
This is so people getting on the Interstate don't have to merge over so many lanes in a 1/4 of a mile
Or the traffic needs x number of lanes to flow properly and only x-1 lane width space is available at some point, but there is room to peel off one lane and send it in another direction before meeting back up after the restriction.
Cities skyline tutorials: so first you place a very simple curve here...
Me: looks away for 1 second
Cities skyline tutorials:
Yeah
Skylines players: I'll take your entire stock
@pine cone I smell a European
City skylines?
Mobile players who don't have paid emulators:cries in corner
@@EvlEgle I'm from Europe lol
@@blagoevski336 Im sorry, it must be really hard having to use public transport so much.
England: Magic Roundabout
Cities Skylines: Hold My Beer
Yes, it becomes crowded instantly and cars are using only one lane
I don t think it s really magic since it take a lot space and force users to turn many times so wasting time that s the reason why people build these huge and expensive projects
15-level stack
There is a similar one at Hemel Hempstead with six mini-roundabouts. It seems to work fairly well most of the time.
It's just 5 mini roundabouts
Many interchanges that look very complex from above are actually quite easy to navigate through.
Agreed, just get in the right lane whenever overhead signs give you options.
Yes, # 5 Springfield , Virginia.. It is not complicated and I pass it daily.. easy, smooth.. just read and FOLLOW the signs carefully.
Bad news, kid: The above photo is "fake". You should have known.
They have to be easy to navigate through or else nobody would know how and it wouldn't have been built.
Isvasu Sadhu yeah #5 is really easy to navigate, I don't have any problems driving through it.
I like how this video gets straight to the point with no filler or clickbait like other top 10 videos. Earned my like.
Thumbnail itself is a clickbait
@@dr.aashish.thumbnail is totally fake
bruh it goes from listing nightmare city-sized interchanges to simple roundabouts that take like 200 metres
Wow 100,000 views! Thank you so much guys.
If you're on desktop PC, you might want to enjoy my latest effort in creating new TH-cam genre here:
th-cam.com/video/bLEC_TExGoE/w-d-xo.html
this one is good.
its a nice proof of concept. Very interesting. Quit unique
Its over half a million now.
YES and 11 or 12, San Fran maybe...but Sweet Osakas and Shanghai got first!! for most....
ɷ Heeeeyyy Friendds I Haveeeee Just Wonnn Brandd New Mac AirPro From visittt : - t.co/hn2nSUbYvy
"This roundabout is so chaotic , the eiffel tower presence would remind you that you're in Europe instead of some Indochina cities"
hahaha
Except for the fact that it is the Arc de Triomphe and NOT the eiffel tower.
At that exact moment you can see that it's chaos entirely because of France's stupid "priorité à droite" rule.
@@michaellee91 I guess it assumes (probably rightfully so) that more people will recognize the Eiffel tower, thus being in Europe rather than the Arc the Triomphe
@@PopeLando Priority to the right is not applied to French roundabouts, except to the Arc de Triomphe one. I drove it many times and it is a very unique challenge. Actually it is not that tough, but you need to stay focused on what you are surrounded by.
Beside that case, priority to the right is a good rule. You just have to get the habit. For a French, it is natural and we never complain about it.
Hahah. I think he never visited China. Otherwise he wouldn't even dare to comment like this.
cities skylines anyone
Yesssss
i thought the video is about cities skylines
only reason I started to be interested in intersections lol
BATMAN Yeah. Actually I love intersections, traffic lights, conjestions. A busy road.
yep me too, thought was a CS vid.
I've been on the Springfield interchange lots of times. And it looks glorious at night!
3:06 Ah yes, the *EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF* interchange.
FYI if you want to reduce inner city traffic, Stockholm solved that problem: inner city car travel tolls.
Also, if you want public transport to be safer, maybe having an anonymous Air Marshal type roll on random buses would greatly help
As for #4 Oyamazaki Interchange, previously the main expressway (Meishin Expressway) was normal dual carriageway. However, congestion became so severe by 1990s that Japan Highway Public Cooperation decided to build another dual carriageway and make it quad carriageway (2+2 for westbound, 2+2 for eastbound). The construction was completed in 1998. Still, the expressway is congested since it connects Osaka, Kyoto, and Nagoya, so another route is under construction which is called Shin-Meishin to bypass the old route.
At #4, the two "unnecessary" branches that lead to the same destination are in fact a very clever way to unclog the way to the destination. Cars are split in two branches and are moving instead of forming a line and clogging the whole system. Very smart.
Yeah, and also one of them is a single purpose thru branch, while the other one is needed to get down to and up from the toll booth. (It' a bit like saying "three of the four leaves in a clover leaf are unneccessary, because you could just take the turn directly.")
It leads to bottleneck where they combine leading to no time savings.
It is an *upramp* from the toll booth heading south. Leave it away and you can't go south from the booth. (South as in bottom left in the pic.)
Wow, two routes that lead to the same place... it's a shame the engineers didn't post the design on TH-cam and get the opinion of the comments section before it was approved.
2:522:522:52
2:522:522:52
「The trick behind Oyamazaki JCT」
th-cam.com/video/57tBxrdxQWs/w-d-xo.html
Unfortunately, almost users didn't know this way because of Car navigation and the complexity of 2nd way.
Sorry for my bad English!
p.s. this page is so easy to understand
www.w-nexco.co.jp/search/jct_map/oyamazaki/
Avid Cities: Skylines Player: *allow me to introduce myself*
I rode around the Arc de Triomphe roundabout 3 or 4 times. The first time, I got the feeling I was becoming a real urban cyclist.
The Magic Roundabout, despite looking intimidating, is actually rather simple. You just follow the lines and give way to the right. Possibly up to 5 times in quick succession.
the arc de triumph roundabout serve the same purpose, following the same rule 'give way to the right' without having to think about following lines :D
@@Arnalou83 yankees think circles have too many angles so the build city-sized monstrocities that are jammed
Looking up “crazy highways” is probably the most random high thought i’ve ever had lmao
I lived in NOVA and drove the “spaghetti bowl” in Springfield very frequently. The new one is a great improvement over the old one. The biggest headache is if you’re not in the correct lane by the time you’re in the midst and traffic is heavy (and it’s almost always so) you either try to do what many tourists do: slow (or even stop for heaven’s sake) or try a last second lane swerve across six lanes of traffic. If you are planning on driving this road and you’re unfamiliar with the roads, either use and follow your GPS or know in advance which road will take you to your destination and stick to it.
And if I end up in the wrong lane, I just keep going, and figure it out later. There's always another exit.
This is very true, as I deal with this interchange five days a week. I am somewhat surprised another that I have gone through is not on the list, and that is the US 75/I-635 interchange in Dallas, Texas.
@0:21 - yes, it looks mad from above but when you're actually driving on it (as I do most weeks), you'd hardly even realise; it's pretty straightforward.
2:50 => Actually it perfectly makes sense to have two routes flowing through each direction. Most of the interchange is only one lane. Having two routes flowing through a central roundabout removes the need to change lanes to change direction. The track starts at the 3 lane straight away. One lane for each approach direction (side, top and bottom). Instead of changing lanes each lane splits into two directions each. Lane 1 is fed by the top and the roundabout, then splits into into the roundabout or goes out the side. Lane 2 is fed by the bottom and the roundabout, and splits into the roundabout or goes out the side. Lane 3 is the roundabout is fed by the side and goes out the top or bottom. It's completely modular. They can section off any point or even the entire central ring (let's say... to have a race) and the freeway would still work.
IQ: over 9000
My passion for Cities Skylines brought me here xD
Same xd
👌
When the Sprinfield Interchange in Virginia first opened, there was a winter storm. The road crews didn't de-ice all of the new surfaces. Among the hundreds trapped during the height of the storm was a school bus. It took some 12 hours to free them.
I like this channel! You make quick videos, not 10:01 videos that only needed to be 4 minutes
Nah. All of these are just from Cities Skylines.
Lol
xD
Just shows you with great pictures like these how good the graphics are on the game :)
Wow ist so cool🏜🏜
Cool
nice background music, straight to the point, interesting, no small talk or extra parts that make the video annoying, just a nice simple list. 10/10 top 10 video
"becoming japan's first building to have a highway pass through it"
wait... so THERE ARE MORE?
Almost all of these are actually interchanges rather thuan intersections, and the grammar was iffy but, aside from from the Italian one you didn’t show very well, they were interesting to see and well shown.
this is some swingin royalty free jazz
Golden Glades Interchange in Miami.
Six major expressways come together plus three major surface streets within a mile.
Make sure your affairs are in order.
Very thought provoking video. I really liked the fact the thumbnail is present in the video.. That right there is a big deal.
fla playa Its photoshopped FYI
I have driven on number 1. Didnt even know it was there until i approached it and thought wtf do i do here lol its a roundabout of roundabouts and surprisingly has a great safety record as everyone goes slow due to confusion lol
I also stumbled onto it while driving before I knew about it, on a rainy, busy Friday rush hour cross country drive, and it definitely caused some initial confusion as I worked out what to do. But it works out alright in the end, we're pretty used to roundabouts here in the UK
It was difficult to read and watch your animation at the same time. Not enough time. Had to watch at a slower speed.
I'm aware the difficulty but you don't want to hear me narrating and using text-to-speech audio would be terrible either. For now this is the way I choose to deliver. I'm sorry if you are not comfortable watching my videos. When its economically feasible enough, I will hire good narrator for my channel.
I think what he means is maybe try to lengthen the time before you show a new section (bridge in this case) as i even found myself pausing as i wanted to see the pictures and read before it changed. wasn't that bad, but think would help.
Yosen B. Mamma
Pause button.
jutubaeh, it's spelt like drive carefully.
what i love about this video is that we spend more time reading than looking at the images, the very subject of the video. You need 4 eyes
the magic roundabout is a brilliant idea!
Would love to see an updated video
I lived in Springfield, VA from 1966 to 1975 and remember this interchange--just outside S'field. It is I-95, I-495 aka the Beltway, and I-395 ( which was just part of 95 in my day ).
That interchange underwent a tremendous upgrade in the mid 2000’s. It is MUCH better now, but still challenging for tourists.
2:40
It's GENIUSLY made!!!
And about 2:50. There's no unnecessary branches. Your colored lines show that.
Interestingly, Swindon's Magic Roundabout also has redundant paths just like the Oyamazaki interchange, the idea being alternate paths in case the other way is congested.
#10 gravelly hill 0:19
#09 gate tower building osaka japan 0:38
#08 judge harry pregerson interchange los angeles, usa 1:07
#07 nanpu bridge, shanghai, china 1:29
#06 porta maggiore, roma, italia 1:52
#05 springfield interchange, virginia, usa 2:12
#04 oyamazaki interchange, osaka, japan 2:28
#03 arc de triomphe cercle, paris, france 2:59
#02 Yanan interchange, shanghai, china 3:22
#01 magic roundabout, swindon, england 3:43
Hahaha the Springfield interchange was literally the first thing to come to my mind.
very nice video.
I could be outside enjoying my life but no...
I am inside with the curtains drawn watching top 10 biggest interchanges
3:04 french engineers be like : *excellent*
engineer's baby: draws a sun.
engineer: damn, how i couldn't come up with that myself!!
@@anasubic3090 lol
Not Crazy for Cities Skylines.
BlockBusterBPL xxx
In cities skylines you can get 8-way intersections
@@mushroomcraft
Yep. But the traffic flow is not usually good then.
15-level stack with all public transport types and pedestrian walkways
Informative and entertaining!
0:44 and i though my appartment was noisy
#5 the Springfield Interchange, is also located at the end of some of the worst traffic in the country. Just South of it is I-95, the only highway anywhere near that takes you South (Fredricksburg, Richmond) from the North (DC, Baltimore). DC to Baltimore has 3 highways but DC South only has 1.
2:33 i wish i could make this in cities skylines...
Fun fact on #3 Arc de Triomphe: every five minutes or so there is a 10-20 second gap when no traffic is coming from any of the 12 side avenues and you can try and quickly run across to the Arc in the center (instead of taking the foot tunnel). Try at your own risk and best not when a Gendarme is nearby.
FYI: the thumbnail photo is of the High Five interchange in Dallas, Texas. If you’re going to use that photo, you might want to include it in your video.
0:46 This building is famous.But this is not ONLY;another junction is also in the building "Namba Hatch", just 2 miles south.
0:55,
{an agreement archived}
or {an agreement achieved}
?
Cynthia Avishegnath 2nd one
If you look carefully, there's bad grammar in every single sentence in this video.
@@SianaGearz People that comment on the spelling/grammar of the video have given data that indeed, people are watching: if they don't react, did they really watch it? :D
Damn nice video I subscribed
thumbnail not here. save yourself
Flyinghotpocket fake not real
00:07
The tumbnail was the one in las angelas
Crazy engineering, anyway very interesting. Thanks for loading!
yes and also think about the guys who layed it down under the brutal weather & under deadline time pressure too 💪
@@Osiwan960 : true
Woah! That man’s stubbornness created something probably never thought of. Highway thru building, it’s really cool.
That "streetbuilding" is in Umeda Osaka in Japan. The construcktion of the tower startet already when the Streetplaning realice they MUST have a Highwayramp there to be able to handle the upcoming Trafic.The owner of that plot was be forced to sell his lot and get a refound for his expenses and he refused it. so the ONLY solution was to build the ramp trugh the building. AND here is the funny part. The City of Osaka Pay a Monthley rent for 5 Flors on that Building for as long that ramp exists. YES 5 Floors for fire safty reasions the floors over and under the street is unusable as well.
@@pepehimovic3135 thats just a whole metro line going through many apartment buildings in Chongqing, China
Cities Skylines modders definitely were taking notes on this.
I live kinda close to the Springfield Interchange or as we call it "The Mixing Bowl" and I had always thought that it was pretty much normal and that there was at least one in every city but I was surprised to see it in this video and I guess a little proud.😁🚗🚙
Connor S ไทย
Connor S Thai
Paris looks very nice from above, the shape of the streets is very cool
A 4-way intersection is to complicated for me.
I'd like how people mistaken typo with broken english
Over the past week, ending November 23, global stock indices showed a negative trend. The focus of investors was the political situation in the European…e-fin.top
2:53 On the branch that has the loop, it connects to other routes of traffic. That traffic, if they choose to eventually turn onto the route going to the bottom-left corner, that branch becomes necessary for them.
I drive on the Springfield Interchange everyday
i really like your video!! subbed and liked!
Where's the one from the thumbnail?
Driving an 18 wheeler for over 30 years, I can think of at least 7 more crazy interchanges starting with I-5 in north San Fernando valley California.
3:28 An average Modder in Cities Skylines
Can't help traffic is fundamentally flawed in that game. And if you want to use industries buildings with basic roads and no traffic manager mod good luck. Base game won't even let you set intersection types
2:40 if a dude in cities skylines made that intersection people on youtube would comment "LUL NUB wtf u building? what mess is this? haha look at this guy, he doesnt know what he's doing"
I'm not surprised the most complicated one is in England, they have their whole traffic flow on the wrong side of the road!
Memewhile its been scientifically and logically proven babes x
Actually the rest of the world drives on the wrong side of the road, it's been proven that driving on the left is safer and better. The driver of the vehicle is sat on the right hand side giving better control of the vehicle when changing gear, using the radio etc. most people are right handed so their right hand will be on the steering wheel when using the vehicles functions.
Check out the use of left side driving in America, both have their merits it seems! :)
Ya, I wonder when the Brits are going to be elevated to French greatness?
Take a look at history my friend, It won't be soon! :P
There's a weird and huge 5 way tollway interchange west of Chicago serving interstate 88/IL 110, interstate 290, and interstate 294, as well as partial connections to IL 38 and surface streets. It's a weird hybrid of 6 partial interchanges smashed into one junction
What about the dallas high five interchange?
Heard about that one on one of those "Modern Marvels" shows.
***** Dallas can get ice?
***** I know, but dallas is in central texas and i didn't think they got ice there any time of ther year.
yeah, that thing is huge
Yeah, that's the tooth. Probably because of all the drilling they do in Texas. And all that ice and snow can leave motorists filling like they've just had a root canal.
You forgot the highway 5 and 14 changes in northern Los Angeles, that one is chaotic too with truck lanes and many exits.
I came from cities skylines and all the comments I see are people who came from cities skylines too 🤦♀️
The "Magic Roundabout " in Swindon is not the only example of this type of interchange, as there is also another such interchange, (also known locally as the "magic roundabout!") in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, with an identical layout and the same number of roads but the traffic on the roundabout travels in both directions, clockwise and anti-clockwise!
It looks like a nightmare to navigate but is actually quite easy!
The hemel Hempstead one, called the Slough(I've been on it) is slightly smaller but has 6 mini roundabouts instead of 5 if I remember rightly
Number 1:
Nerdcubed: *How about a roundabout MADE OUT OF ROUNDABOUT'S!*
They work, but you have to concentrate.
hit pause at 0:10 its includet already ;)
Absolutely right! Craziest express ways...it looks a little tough, but once you there, you there, drive or drive...
The background music also used in a game named "Intersection Controller" is this a coincidence?
Do you know what this song is called?
The dev of that game is literally a toxic rude person.
@@JadeEnby that doesnt mean we shouldn't be paying his game, also why?
I like to nominate the Bruckner Interchange in NY for honorable mention. It was initially finished in 1972 and it solved one of the worst traffic congestion areas anywhere at the time. A second 1.8 billion dollar project for the Bruckner is nearly finished. It fixes a couple of bridges and the hunt point market access as well as numerous local access.
Fun fact about the arc de triumph roundabout
You lose insurance coverage when on it
Jared Woltman WHAT
5 minute of Google-Fu meditation reveals that it's a myth, but insurance companies do handle it in a special way - they split damages evenly, because it's near impossible to determine fault and lengthy litigations just drain their money.
I went there at 3am on a Sunday night, when the roads were empty. What could possibly go wrong, I thought. Now's my chance to drive around that infamous roundabout, stress free. Utterly terrifying about halfway round, when cars and busses started piling on from a side road in front of me. Never again!
It's priority given to the entering driver, like a lot of places in Paris. Just FYI, priority on the right applies when there are no road sign and, oh! no road sign at Etoile! Fun fact, there is only one stop in the whole city ;)
As for insurance, no matter the place, accident in a roundabout is almost all the time a 50/50 issue.
@@CartmanVlaams I'm
The spiral to bridge is just elegant.
where’s dallas high five interchange?
I would lose my mind traveling on those interchanges every day
I go through 1:14 all the time, there is more hidden inside
My 8 siblings at 7am on a Wednesday with only 2 bathrooms makes it the busiest congestion ever
Oh so roundabouts don't work in cities:skylines AND real life!
Rudy Steiner roundabouts are most efficient on A-Roads or in suburbs (really small roundabouts) anything more than a Dual Carriageway usually has a problem with roundabouts, i.e motorways rely on intersections.
Actually, if you knew how roundabouts worked, you'd understand they're very successful at keeping traffic flowing. What fucks them up is people approaching, instead of properly merging into the flowing traffic, they STOP!!! They sit there and wait for an opening. That's way roundabouts have no red, yellow and green LIGHTS! You're not supposed to STOP! Very simple process but most drivers don't understand or even know the proper theory of operation of something as simple as a non-moving part roundabout! "Look! No red, yellow and green lights! What do I do? STOP for Christ's sake!" Blithering idiots, you included. You should have known.
You try to merge into traffic in a roundabout Western Washington without waiting for an opening you will get hit by another car. People in this state are jealous of their position in traffic and leave precisely three feet of clearance between them and the car in front of them.
That "three feet" goes nationwide. I'm "Old School". I refuse to tailgate and always let someone in...as long as they signal their intention! Tailgaters get their windshield "washed" by me. Just turn my wipers on high and hit the fluid. Pisses people off! Me? I wouldn't mind. Hell, free wash and saves my fluid!
In Birmingham you either love or hate the spaghetti junction there is no in between
This list is irrelevant considering the fact that you can find all of the worlds craziest interchanges in one city. Houston has some of the best roadways in the world. There are seven 5-stack interchanges on beltway eight alone.
Edit: I amend my initial statement to say that this list is a good list of unique interchanges.
Ben Durgin Oh you Americans
LMAO!
Kudos for the soundtrack!
Hep Cats by Kevin MacLeod
Hong Kong has a highway through a shopping mall... Japan is not the only one
Duncan's Lego Tech chan yes but u cnt compared Japan is ahead n way better than china
Berlin Germany also has a 6 lane gighway through a building.
They said the first, not the only one.
@@RB25luv Not necessarily
The Springfield interchange is a vast improvement over the original design, separating through from local traffic and eliminating a very dangerous merge/exit point for I95 and the DC beltway.
Where's Tokyo's "The World's Busiest intersection"?
My brother from the mid-West visited me and had to drive through the Springfield Mixing Bowl for the first time. He said it was a "white knuckle ride" and that his GPS lit up like a Christmas tree....lol.
#5 is called "The Mixing Bowl" in the parlance of our times.
Hello from 3 years in the future. "the mixing bowl" was what that interchanged was called in the before times when it was a 9 lane wide death trap.
very interesting constructions. I salute you Engineers
Anyone else think of the roundabout seen with Chevy Chase in European Vacation?
I think #7 is actually pretty smart. Exits are clear, entrances are clear, a steady flow is maintained at all times.
England ... of course England ... they are driving on the wrong side of the road.
*Heavy breathing Cities:Skylines player sounds* must build intersections!