Welcome to Pedestrian Safety Reflectors!

 


 
Pedestrians and bicyclists can increase their nighttime visibility with pedestrian safety reflectors. A pedestrian reflector make the user five times more visible to motorists and about eight times safer than without while running, walking or bicycling during dark hours. Reflective clothing enhances traffic safety even further. Do you need additional funding? If you are a government agency or a non-profit, you probably qualify for funding of reflector purchases as part of a pedestrian and / or bicycle safety program. See funding.pedestrian safety

Reflectors as a countermeasure: 

Each year in the United States, almost 5,000 pedestrians are killed in accidents involving motor vehicles. For every pedestrian killed, 14 more are injured. According to the NHTSA (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration), walking is 36 times more dangerous than driving, and 300 times more dangerous than flying.

A large number of pedestrian fatalities result from drivers not being able to see a pedestrian in the dark. It has been estimated in Europe that about half of all pedestrian deaths during dark hours could have been avoided if the pedestrian had been wearing a pedestrian safety reflector.

At Pedestrian Safety, we are dedicated to the sale of high quality pedestrian reflectors such as CoreFlect, Finn-Nauha and Stavellan. These have been so successful in saving lives in European countries that the use of pedestrian reflectors after dark became mandatory in Finland as of January 1, 2003.

About pedestrian reflectors:

CoreFlect reflectors are available in a variety of attractive shapes and colors with a cord attachment that allows them to swing freely, thus attracting the attention of a motorist on a dark roadway about five times farther away than without one.

Finn-Nauha reflectors are elastic, worn around the head, wrists or ankles.  They come in attractive colors, are highly reflective and are comfortable to wear.

The slap-wrap type of reflector is simply snapped over the wrist or ankle and is visible to a motorist long before the pedestrian can be seen.

 


Copyright 2002-2008 pedestrian safety