Most pedestrian close-calls aren't caused by reckless drivers alone — they happen when a small habit is missing. This intermediate-level lesson on subway safety installs that habit in under 15 minutes.
Guided voice
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Audible pedestrian signals
Subway Safety · 60-second visual walkthrough
Subway Safety situations are over-represented in pedestrian incident data across the five boroughs. Manhattan avenues, the BQE service roads, and the avenues feeding the bridges concentrate the risk. The technique below is built specifically for that density — narrow sidewalks, fast turning vehicles, and unpredictable cyclists weaving through.
Approach the situation with a 3-step rhythm: scan, signal, step. Scan a full 180° before you commit. Signal your intent — eye contact, a clear stride, or a raised hand for turning vehicles. Step decisively; hesitation in the middle of an intersection is more dangerous than a confident walk. Practice this rhythm for the next 24 hours on every subway safety situation you meet.
The two failure modes that show up over and over: 1) Trusting the WALK signal without scanning for turning vehicles, and 2) Assuming a slowing vehicle has actually seen you. Neither is safe. The signal manages traffic flow; it does not stop a distracted driver mid-turn. A slowing car may be braking for something else entirely.
On your next outing, count how many times the scenario from this lesson appears. Most students of this course report 6–12 encounters per day with their assigned topic. Treat each one as a rep. By the end of the week, the technique becomes automatic — which is exactly when it starts saving you.
Tap each item as you complete it on your next walk.