Limited Traffic Zone
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Limited traffic zone (LTZ) is type of restricted traffic area found in many historic European
city centre A city centre is the commercial, cultural and often the historical, political, and geographic heart of a city. The term "city centre" is primarily used in British English, and closely equivalent terms exist in other languages, such as "" in Fren ...
s where non-residents and unauthorized vehicles are prohibited from driving at certain times. These areas are relatively abundant in Italy, where they are called (ZTL), but they also exist in Spain, Portugal, France and Poland with different names. Around 350 Italian cities have LTZs, and 250 have low-emission zones (LEZs), usually enforced with camera surveillance. They help protect historic city centres from excessive traffic, which would otherwise make the city less attractive. They can also be aimed at limiting pollution levels or at increasing administrative revenue by paying an urban toll. In most Italian LTZs (ZTLs), vehicles transporting people with disability are allowed when displaying the appropriate badge. As Article 47 of the Italian Traffic Code () defines bicycles as vehicles, cycling is only allowed if specified on the road sign. Unauthorized movement of vehicles in a ZTL is punishable by a fine under Article 7(14) in conjunction with the relevant city ordinance, and the fine is between 83 and 332 euros. In 2009 the city of Florence issued an average of 1,253 traffic tickets a day, for an annual revenue of 52 million euro. The fines tripled over the previous ten year period. In the same year revenues from traffic fines in Milan were 81 million euro. About 53% of these fines come from LTZ violations.


Italian signage


Entrance signs

The sign indicating the start of the ZTL is composed of a series of panels. The first, mandatory, has a square shape and contains the "no vehicles" sign and the written ''zona traffico limitato''. Below this signal other panels are placed are positioned according to the type of ZTL. Panels are provided to indicate the period of validity, exceptions or limitations to the prohibition, report the presence of an electronic gate or provide telephone numbers to obtain information on the ZTL. To allow drivers to immediately understand if the ZTL is active, municipal administrations often integrate road signs with electronic displays indicating, for example, ''ZTL attiva'' (ZTL active) or ''ZTL non attiva'' (ZTL inactive). Image:ztl_1.jpg, Aosta Image:ZTL Aoste rue de Vevey.JPG, Aosta (via Vevey, bilingual) Image:ZTL Etroubles VdA.JPG, Etroubles Image:Cartello ZTL Palermo.jpg,
Palermo Palermo ( , ; scn, Palermu , locally also or ) is a city in southern Italy, the capital (political), capital of both the autonomous area, autonomous region of Sicily and the Metropolitan City of Palermo, the city's surrounding metropolitan ...
(inactive at night) Image:Padova juil 09 25 (8380758368).jpg, Padova (active only on workdays and inactive at night) Image:Torino 2007 45 (8193234494).jpg, Torino (active in different periods for different vehicles)


Notice signs

The warning signs of a ZTL are not expressly provided for in the regulations implementing the Italian Traffic Code and therefore are created in analogy to the warning signs of urban intersection. These signs must in any case contain the symbol of the ZTL, if possible integrated with all the panels present on the sign placed at the access gate. However, given that very often it is not possible to reproduce all the indications present on the main signal, the Ministry of Transport has established that the warning sign cannot contain more than two panels, to be chosen between: * a time slot panel and a vehicle category panel * two panels relating to two categories of vehicles (see ) Examples of generic warning signs, without supplementary panels: Italian_traffic_signs_-_preavviso_ZTL_sinistro.svg Italian_traffic_signs_-_preavviso_ZTL_dritto.svg Italian_traffic_signs_-_preavviso_ZTL_destra.svg


Implementation in other countries

In October 1988, Kraków implemented an LTZ in its city center. In October 2012,
Nantes Nantes (, , ; Gallo: or ; ) is a city in Loire-Atlantique on the Loire, from the Atlantic coast. The city is the sixth largest in France, with a population of 314,138 in Nantes proper and a metropolitan area of nearly 1 million inhabita ...
was the first French city to adopt the concept of an LTZ in the city center. In June 2022, Newcastle upon Tyne introduced School Streets with similar restrictions.


Navigation software support

Most
satellite navigation software Satellite navigation software or GPS navigation software usually falls into one of the following two categories: # Navigation with route calculation and directions from the software to the user of the route to take, based on a vector-based map, n ...
does not avoid LTZs. Waze added support for LTZs in select cities in 2018.


Controversies

In Italy, since 2007, many tourists were fined for entering a ZTL. These tickets often reach them by post several months after their stay in Italy, sometimes more than one year later. Unauthorized entry into a ZTL is the most frequent fine on rental cars, more than exceeding speed limits and unpaid parking. Many tourists are unaware of ZTL regulations, some misinterpret signage at entrances. The process is considered dubious by tourists and consumer associations because the signs indicating the prohibition of access to the ZTL are often not very visible and written in Italian. In addition, the value of fine is high (around 100 euros) and it is doubled for the same offense (once for entering the ZTL, another when leaving).


See also

* Car-free movement * Congestion pricing * Low Traffic Neighbourhood * Pedestrian zone * Road pricing * Road space rationing


References

{{Reflist


External links


Urban Access Regulations in Europe
Road transport in Italy Environment of Italy Traffic calming Car-free zones in Europe Traffic law