Skip to content
Ep 34 - Simulation Analysis: Testing Pedestrian Safety Before It Hits the Street

Episode 34

Ep 34 - Simulation Analysis: Testing Pedestrian Safety Before It Hits the Street

On this episode of Infrastructure Insights, we’re joined by Ethan Meszaros to explore how traffic simulation models serve as a practical, decision support tool for evaluating pedestrian crossing treatments in complex, multimodal environments. Ethan walks us through how simulation can be used to test real-world questions—such as how a crossing treatment may affect pedestrian delay, vehicle operations, safety tradeoffs or interactions between different modes—before changes are implemented in the field. 

We also talk about what makes a traffic simulation useful: clear assumptions, careful calibration, and a model that reflects how people actually move through a corridor or intersection. And for cities and agencies with limited time or resources, Ethan shares how traffic modeling does not have to be an all-or-nothing effort. When used selectively, it can support phased implementation, compare practical alternatives, and help teams focus on their investment where it adds the most value.  

Ethan Meszaros, EIT, Traffic Analyst

Ethan Meszaros, EIT 
Traffic Analyst

Ethan Meszaros is a Traffic Analyst in B&N’s Phoenix office, where he supports transportation planning, traffic modeling and corridor analysis for agencies across Arizona and the Southwest. His experience spans travel demand modeling, traffic simulation and multimodal corridor studies for cities, counties and state DOTs. Ethan brings hands-on expertise with PTV Visum, Vissim and Synchro/SimTraffic to help clients plan and operate safer, more efficient transportation networks. Ethan is a frequent transit rider, using both light rail and buses on a regular basis and promotes multimodal transportation alternatives both personally and professionally.