Road signs in Austria explained

Road signs in Austria are regulated in Straßenverkehrsordnung (StVO).[1]

Road signs are generally placed on the right side next to the road or above the road. Sometimes signs are also placed on both sides, in some exceptional cases signs are only place on the left or on one side (particularly town signs).

Austrian warning and prohibitory signs have a white background framed by red edges like most of the European road signs.However Austria has a different No through road (dead end) - sign as most of the European countries. The sign seems to be a white inverted T and has no red stripe.

Austrian road signs depict people with realistic (as opposed to stylized) silhouettes.

The Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals, the country's original signatory, takes its name from the country's capital, Vienna. Austria signed the Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals on November 8, 1968 and ratified it on August 11, 1981.[2]

Signs with text are set in the Tern typeface since 2013.[3]

See also

Transport in Austria

Notes and References

  1. Book: Republic of Austria . Straßenverkehrsordnung 1960, Fassung vom 12.11.2018 . 12 November 2018 . Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs . § 50. . 12 November 2018.
  2. Web site: United Nations Treaty Collection . 2023-12-10 . treaties.un.org . EN.
  3. Web site: 292. Verordnung der Bundesministerin für Verkehr, Innovation und Technologie, mit der die Verordnung über Straßenverkehrszeichen (Straßenverkehrszeichenverordnung 1998 – StVZVO 1998) geändert wird (1. Novelle zur StVZVO 1998) . 15 March 2023 . de . 3 October 2013.