Legislation
Vehicle knowledge
Traffic signs and signals
PRIORITY
SPECIAL ROADS, ROAD SECTIONS, ROAD USERS, AND MANEUVERS
USE OF THE ROAD
HAZARD PERCEPTION

Road narrowings

Sometimes the road is narrowed by placing bollards on the carriageway. There may be traffic signs at these road narrowings, regulating who may drive first through the road narrowing. Alternatively, there may be no signs regulating who may drive through the road narrowing first.
The latter possibility is increasingly common. Why do you think this happens? If traffic signs are placed at a road narrowing and the sign on your side says that you may go through the road narrowing first, what happens in practice? You know the situation and you know you can go first and you drive through without slowing down. Road barriers are usually placed as a speed reduction measure. If the speed does not go down, the road narrowing as a speed reduction measure does not make much sense. What happens more and more often now; road barriers are made without regulating who can drive through the road barrier first. You then have to approach the road narrowing quietly because you cannot see from afar whether someone is approaching from the other side and if so whether they will let you pass.

Tip: Don’t just look at the color of the arrows shown on signs F5 and F6. Now what if it has been snowing and you can’t see the colors of the arrows? Quite simply, you look at the shape of the sign. Simply put: “If you see the round sign you have to wait, if you see the square sign you can drive on, unless there are pedestrians coming from the other direction”.
During the theory exam at the CBR, questions regularly occur where the signs are snow-covered.