What does unevenly aligned street intersection mean?

Imagine a street intersection where all the lanes are parallel to the other after a passing lanes turn. So that it is possible in practice to describe it like these. If you driven through the intersection and maintained your lane, you would have to veer a bit to one side as you crossed to be totally within the lane as you exited the intersection. The vertical slope or grade isn’t the focus, but the horizontal alignment of the lanes.

Do you want to use technical terms in English? What I’ve come up with so far is “staggered.” Notwithstanding the fact that the lanes are uneven it is not true that it is.All lanes need not be uneven (in case that matters).

Thank you. Thank you very much!

What are some examples?

Add Comment
3 Answer(s)

If the lane is parallel, but offset, then it seems to be commonly referred to as a Staggered Junction or Offset T-Intersection.

When the lane meets at the same point on both sides of the intersection, at a different angle then a commonly used phrase is Skewed Intersection ( Oblique alignment is rarely used)*.

I re-confirmed that “oblique alignment” was usually used, but it’s actually not.

What the best way to start a new career?

Answered on December 21, 2021.
Add Comment

If the lane is parallel, but offset, then it seems to be commonly referred to as a Staggered Junction or Offset T-Intersection.

When the lane meets at the same point on both sides of the intersection, at a different angle then a commonly used phrase is Skewed Intersection ( Oblique alignment is rarely used)*.

I re-confirmed that “oblique alignment” was usually used, but it’s actually not.

What the best way to start a new career?

Answered on December 21, 2021.
Add Comment

If the lane is parallel, but offset, then it seems to be commonly referred to as a Staggered Junction or Offset T-Intersection.

When the lane meets at the same point on both sides of the intersection, at a different angle then a commonly used phrase is Skewed Intersection ( Oblique alignment is rarely used)*.

I re-confirmed that “oblique alignment” was usually used, but it’s actually not.

What the best way to start a new career?

Answered on December 20, 2021.
Add Comment

Your Answer

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.