Road signs in Japan

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Signs on Aichi prefectural road No.439 in Toyooka, Shinshiro, Aichi; road narrows, slow down (former design), no trucks and speed limit 30 km/h
A road of traffic signs
Meinikan Expressway of Japan

In Japan, road signs (道路標識, dōro-hyōshiki) are standardized by the "Order on Road Sign, Road Line, and Road Surface Marking (道路標識、区画線及び道路標示に関する命令)" established in 1968 with origins from the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department's "Order on Standardization of Road Sign" of 1934 and the Home Ministry of Japan's "Order on Road Signs" of 1942.[1] The previous designs have been used since 1986 after several amendments of order.[2]

They are divided into "Principal Sign" (本標識, hon-hyōshiki) and "Supplemental Sign" (補助標識, hojo-hyōshiki).

Principal signs

Principal signs (本標識, hon-hyōshiki) are categorized into 4 types; guide, warning, regulatory and instruction signs.

Guide signs

Guide signs (案内標識, an'nai-hyōshiki) indicates directions or distances of the road. Guide signs have dark green backgrounds and white text for expressways. In urban areas and on national highways, direction signs have dark blue backgrounds. The signs are normally written in Japanese and English. Since 2014, Vialog is used as the typeface for English words and Place name Transcriptions.

[3]

  • Expressway ramp ahead
    Expressway ramp ahead
  • Expressway exit ahead
    Expressway exit ahead
  • Exits and distance (expressway)
    Exits and distance (expressway)
  • Junction (expressway)
    Junction (expressway)
  • Expressway number (E1; Tomei)
    Expressway number (E1; Tomei)
  • Expressway shield (E4; Tōhoku)
    Expressway shield (E4; Tōhoku)
  • Urban Expressway shield (C1; Shuto C1)
    Urban Expressway shield (C1;
    C1
    )
  • Intersection
    Intersection
  • Intersection
    Intersection
  • Distance of cities and areas
    Distance of cities and areas
  • National highway shield (Route 20)
    National highway shield (Route 20)
  • National highway shield
    National highway shield
  • National highway shield
    National highway shield
  • Prefectural highway shield (Fukuoka Route 758)
    Prefectural highway shield (Fukuoka Route 758)
  • Prefectural highway shield
    Prefectural highway shield
  • Prefectural highway shield (inter-city route)
    Prefectural highway shield (inter-city route)
  • Prefectural highway shield
    Prefectural highway shield
  • Prefectural highway shield (inter-city route)
    Prefectural highway shield (inter-city route)
  • Street name
    Street name
  • Detour
    Detour
  • Detour
    Detour
  • Mitigated limitation of height (expressway)
    Mitigated limitation of height (expressway)
  • Mitigated limitation of weight
    Mitigated limitation of weight

Warning signs

Warning signs (警戒標識, keikai-hyōshiki) warn drivers of dangers or situations that they must pay attention to. Their design, black pattern and border on yellow diamond (usually with 45 cm per a side), is based on the U.S.

MUTCD (due to this nation being part of Major non-NATO ally).[4]

  • Crossroads
    Crossroads
  • T-intersection with road on the right
    T-intersection with road on the right
  • T-junction
    T-junction
  • T-intersection with road on the left
    T-intersection with road on the left
  • Y-junction
    Y-junction
  • Traffic circle
    Traffic circle
  • Curve to the right
    Curve to the right
  • Curve to the left
    Curve to the left
  • Sharp curve to the right
    Sharp curve to the right
  • Sharp curve to the left
    Sharp curve to the left
  • Double curve, first to the right
    Double curve, first to the right
  • Double curve, first to the left
    Double curve, first to the left
  • Double sharp, first to the right
    Double sharp, first to the right
  • Double sharp, first to the left
    Double sharp, first to the left
  • Winding road first curve to the right
    Winding road first curve to the right
  • Winding road first curve to the left
    Winding road first curve to the left
  • Railroad crossing ahead Option 1: steam locomotive
    Railroad crossing ahead
    Option 1: steam locomotive
  • Railroad crossing ahead Option 2: electric train
    Railroad crossing ahead
    Option 2: electric train
  • School ahead
    School ahead
  • Traffic light ahead
    Traffic light ahead
  • Slippery road
    Slippery road
  • Fallen rocks
    Fallen rocks
  • Bumpy road
    Bumpy road
  • Traffic merges from the left
    Traffic merges from the left
  • Left lane ends
    Left lane ends
  • Road narrows on both sides
    Road narrows on both sides
  • Two-way traffic ahead
    Two-way traffic ahead
  • Steep descent (10%, 1:10)
    Steep descent (10%, 1:10)
  • Steep ascent (10%, 1:10)
    Steep ascent (10%, 1:10)
  • Men at work
    Men at work
  • Crosswind
    Crosswind
  • Watch for large animals (deer)
    Watch for large animals (deer)
  • Watch for large animals (rabbit)
    Watch for large animals (rabbit)
  • Watch for large animals (monkey)
    Watch for large animals (monkey)
  • Watch for large animals (raccoon dogs)
    Watch for large animals (raccoon dogs)
  • Be careful
    Be careful

Regulatory signs

Regulatory signs (規制標識, kisei-hyōshiki) show the regulations of each roads in order to keep road condition and prevent dangers of traffic.

The stop sign is a red, downward-pointing triangle, with the text 止まれ (tomare) & "stop" (in English, for the pre-1963 and current designs only) in white. Prohibition signs are round with white backgrounds, red borders, and blue pictograms. Mandatory instruction signs are round with blue backgrounds and white pictograms.

  • Stop and slow down
  • Slow down (In Japanese and English, current design from 2017)
    Slow down (In Japanese and English, current design from 2017)
  • Slow down (In Japanese Only, phased out in 2017)
    Slow down (In Japanese Only, phased out in 2017)
  • Yield (In Japanese Only, phased out in 2017)
    Yield (In Japanese Only, phased out in 2017)
  • Stop (In Japanese and English, current design from 2017)
    Stop (In Japanese and English, current design from 2017)
  • Stop (In Japanese Only, used from 1963 to 2017)
    Stop (In Japanese Only, used from 1963 to 2017)
  • Stop (In English Only, used in United States Armed Forces Bases in Japan.)
    Stop (In English Only, used in United States Armed Forces Bases in Japan.)
  • Stop sign, used from 1950 to 1960
    Stop sign, used from 1950 to 1960
  • Stop sign, used from 1960 to 1963
    Stop sign, used from 1960 to 1963
  • Exclusions
  • Road closed to all
    Road closed to all
  • Road closed to vehicles
    Road closed to vehicles
  • No entry
    No entry
  • No motor vehicles except motorcycles and mopeds
    No motor vehicles except motorcycles and mopeds
  • No trucks
    No trucks
  • No buses
    No buses
  • No motorbikes or mopeds
    No motorbikes or mopeds
  • No non-motorized vehicles except bicycles
    No non-motorized vehicles except bicycles
  • No bicycles
    No bicycles
  • No motor vehicles
    No motor vehicles
  • No two-person motorbikes or mopeds
    No two-person motorbikes or mopeds
  • No vehicles carrying dangerous goods
    No vehicles carrying dangerous goods
  • Weight limit
    Weight limit
  • Height limit
    Height limit
  • Width limit
    Width limit
  • Motor vehicles only(Except mopeds)
    Motor vehicles only(Except mopeds)
  • Bicycles only
    Bicycles only
  • Bicycles and pedestrians only
    Bicycles and pedestrians only
  • Pedestrians only
    Pedestrians only
  • Road closed to pedestrians
    Road closed to pedestrians
  • Turns
  • Only straight ahead or left turn permitted
    Only straight ahead or left turn permitted
  • Only straight ahead or right turn permitted
    Only straight ahead or right turn permitted
  • Turn left
    Turn left
  • Turn right
    Turn right
  • No turns
    No turns
  • Turn left or right
    Turn left or right
  • Directions permitted
    Directions permitted
  • Roundabout
    Roundabout
  • Keep left
    Keep left
  • Keep right
    Keep right
  • No crossing center line to enter e.g. a car park
    No crossing center line to enter e.g. a car park
  • No U-turn
    No U-turn
  • Two-stage right turn for mopeds & bicycles required.
    Two-stage right turn for mopeds & bicycles required.
  • Two-stage right turn for mopeds & bicycles NOT required.
    Two-stage right turn for mopeds & bicycles NOT required.
  • Restrictions
  • No crossing center line to overtake. 追越し禁止 sign below = NO passing at all
    No crossing center line to overtake. 追越し禁止 sign below = NO passing at all
  • Speed limit
    Speed limit
  • End of special speed limit The statutory speed limit applies
    End of special speed limit
    The statutory speed limit applies
  • End of speed restriction limit[5]
    End of speed restriction limit[5]
  • Minimum speed limit
    Minimum speed limit
  • One-way street to the left
    One-way street to the left
  • One way street to the right
    One way street to the right
  • One-way street ahead
    One-way street ahead
  • One way (bikes)
    One way (bikes)
  • Trucks use left lane[6]
    Trucks use left lane[6]
  • Buses-only lane
    Buses-only lane
  • Bike lane
    Bike lane
  • Buses-priority lane
    Buses-priority lane
  • Lane usage
    Lane usage
  • Lane usage
    Lane usage
  • Lane usage
    Lane usage
  • Lane usage
    Lane usage
  • Use car horns
    Use car horns
  • No jaywalking
  • Parking and stopping
  • No stopping
    No stopping
  • No parking
    No parking
  • Restricted parking
    Restricted parking
  • Parallel parking
    Parallel parking
  • Perpendicular parking
    Perpendicular parking
  • Angle parking
    Angle parking

Instruction signs

Instruction signs (指示標識, shiji-hyōshiki) show points and devices on the road that drivers should pay attention.

  • Cyclists are permitted to ride side-by-side.
    Cyclists are permitted to ride side-by-side.
  • Driving on tram line permitted (Except two-wheelers)
    Driving on tram line permitted (Except two-wheelers)
  • Priority road
    Priority road
  • Center line
    Center line
  • Stop line
    Stop line
  • Parking zone
    Parking zone
  • Stopping permitted
    Stopping permitted
  • Crosswalk Alt. A
    Crosswalk
    Alt. A
  • Crosswalk Alt. B: school zone
    Crosswalk
    Alt. B: school zone
  • Bike crossing
    Bike crossing
  • Bike and crosswalk
    Bike and crosswalk
  • Tram stop
  • Controls ahead
    Controls ahead

Supplemental signs

Supplemental signs (補助標識, hojo-hyōshiki) are usually put just below the principal signs, and shows their valid range like time, day and category of vehicle.

MUTCD. The width of the plates is usually 60 cm, and the sentences should be less than 7 characters per a line or 3 lines.[8] When the sentences can not be shortened less than the limitation, they should apply changeable signs.[8]

  • 100 meters ahead
    100 meters ahead
  • Next 50 meters
    Next 50 meters
  • Except Sundays and Holidays
    Except Sundays and Holidays
  • 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
    8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
  • Except mopeds
    Except mopeds
  • Large trucks
    Large trucks
  • Bicycles (symbol)
    Bicycles (symbol)
  • Trucks (symbol)
    Trucks (symbol)
  • Trucks carrying over 3 tonnes (symbol)
    Trucks carrying over 3 tonnes (symbol)
  • Only for permitted vehicles
    Only for permitted vehicles
  • Leave at least 6 meters road width clear when you park
    Leave at least 6 meters road width clear when you park
  • Permitted until the time the parking meter shows
    Permitted until the time the parking meter shows
  • Restriction begins (symbol)
    Restriction begins (symbol)
  • Restriction begins
    Restriction begins
  • Restriction begins
    Restriction begins
  • Restricted zone (symbol)
    Restricted zone (symbol)
  • Restricted zone
    Restricted zone
  • End of restriction (symbol)
    End of restriction (symbol)
  • End of restriction
    End of restriction
  • End of restriction
    End of restriction
  • End of restriction
    End of restriction
  • School zone
    School zone
  • No passing or overtaking
    No passing or overtaking
  • Yield
    Yield
  • Train crossing caution
    Train crossing caution
  • Caution crosswind
    Caution crosswind
  • Caution wild animals
    Caution wild animals
  • Caution
    Caution
  • Safety speed: 30 km/h
    Safety speed: 30 km/h
  • Caution soft shoulder
    Caution soft shoulder
  • Be quiet
    Be quiet
  • direction
    direction
  • Control zone: Honmachi, Komoro
    Control zone: Honmachi, Komoro
  • Starts
    Starts
  • Ends
    Ends

Other signs

History

A photograph of an early Japanese road warning sign for a curve. The design is similar to British pre-Worboys signage, except that the lettering was white and the background was black.

The first standardised road signage schemes appeared in 1922. At first, two types of signs were established: "road warning signs" equivalent to warning signs and "road guide signs" as information signs.[9] Warning signs at that time closely resembled the British design as used in Hong Kong, the only difference was the white-on-black lettering.

Japanese road signs in the early 1940s closely followed European road signage practices at that time based on the 1931 Geneva Convention, except that most road signages contained text. A variation of the early 1940s Japanese road signage system is still in use today in Taiwan.[9][10]

In 1950, a complete revision of the "Road Signs Ordinance" was promulgated and enforced as an Ordinance of the Prime Minister's Office and the Ministry of Construction. Unlike the 1922 and the 1940s devised road signs, it included both

MUTCD yellow diamond design.[9] It also introduces the yellow American stop sign that only lasted for 10 years. This road signage system was used until 1963, when it was replaced with a new road signage system that is based on the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals. The present-day Japanese road signage system also replaced the stop sign's shape with an inverted equilateral triangle like the old stop sign used in China.[9]

The octagonal "stop" sign design recommended by the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals

In 2016, it was announced that the Japanese National Police Agency was considering changing the design of the "Stop" sign used on Japanese roads since 1963 from the inverted red triangle sign to an octagonal design more closely conforming to the recommendations of the 1968 Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals.[11] The inverted red triangle sign was introduced in 1963 ahead of the 1964 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo, and replaced the earlier red octagonal sign used from 1960, which in turn had replaced the yellow octagonal sign used from 1950.[11] It was later decided to make the stop sign bilingual in both Japanese and English, but to maintain the inverted triangular shape.[12]

Photographs

  • Street name and highway shields (Chiba Prefecture)
    Street name and highway shields (Chiba Prefecture)
  • Expressway exit sign
    Expressway exit sign
  • Intersection guide sign
    Intersection guide sign
  • Height and weight restrictions apply (to streets pointed to by arrows)
    Height and weight restrictions apply (to streets pointed to by arrows)
  • Lane usage signs
    Lane usage signs
  • Changeable lane usage signs
    Changeable lane usage signs
  • Directions permitted
    Directions permitted
  • Tram stop
    Tram stop
  • Right turn prohibition (7-9 a.m.) ends
    Right turn prohibition (7-9 a.m.) ends
  • Taxis without any passengers can not enter from 9 p.m. until 2 a.m.
    Taxis without any passengers can not enter from 9 p.m. until 2 a.m.
  • Restrictions 200 m ahead
    Restrictions 200 m ahead
  • Asian highway sign and symbol of Nihonbashi (Shuto Expressway)
    Asian highway sign and symbol of Nihonbashi (Shuto Expressway)

References

  1. ^ 時崎賢二 1990, p. 22.
  2. ^ dark-RX 2008, p. 105.
  3. ^ "Fuenfwerken-Schrift in Japan | Fuenfwerken". www.fuenfwerken.com (in German). Retrieved 2018-03-23.
  4. ^ 時崎賢二 1979, p. 24.
  5. ^ A left arrow or ここまで in the supplemental sign (plaque) means "END". A right arrow or ここから in the plaque means "BEGIN".
  6. ^ The symbol can be changed to other vehicles.
  7. ^ 全標協 2013, p. 3(設置)
  8. ^ a b 警察庁 2017, p. 32.
  9. ^ a b c d "道路標識の歴史(変遷) | KICTEC". KICTEC | 交通インフラから公共空間まで多彩な快適環境保全創りに挑みます (in Japanese). 2012-06-18. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  10. ^ "旧型道路標識一覧(禁止・指導・規制・警戒標識)". trafficsignal.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-09-09.
  11. ^ a b "Design of Japanese stop signs might change ahead of Olympic tourism surge". The Japan Times. Japan: The Japan Times Ltd. 21 January 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  12. ^ "英語併記の新標識お目見え 一時停止に「STOP」". 日本経済新聞 電子版 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2018-01-24.

Bibliography