What are these little yellow boxes at German pedestrian crossings? [duplicate] The 2019 Stack...

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What are these little yellow boxes at German pedestrian crossings? [duplicate]



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This question already has an answer here:




  • How do you use Berlin crosswalk signal boxes?

    2 answers




I've been to Germany twice now: Once to Berlin and once to Bielefeld.



Both places had these yellow boxes with the same pattern at pedestrian crossings.



enter image description here



At first I thought they were to press for crossing, but there doesn't seem to be any way to actually press them so I'm confused as to what their role is.



What exactly are they for?










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by phoog, Dirty-flow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo, Giorgio, choster Mar 22 at 16:11


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.

























    17
















    This question already has an answer here:




    • How do you use Berlin crosswalk signal boxes?

      2 answers




    I've been to Germany twice now: Once to Berlin and once to Bielefeld.



    Both places had these yellow boxes with the same pattern at pedestrian crossings.



    enter image description here



    At first I thought they were to press for crossing, but there doesn't seem to be any way to actually press them so I'm confused as to what their role is.



    What exactly are they for?










    share|improve this question













    marked as duplicate by phoog, Dirty-flow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo, Giorgio, choster Mar 22 at 16:11


    This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.





















      17












      17








      17


      1







      This question already has an answer here:




      • How do you use Berlin crosswalk signal boxes?

        2 answers




      I've been to Germany twice now: Once to Berlin and once to Bielefeld.



      Both places had these yellow boxes with the same pattern at pedestrian crossings.



      enter image description here



      At first I thought they were to press for crossing, but there doesn't seem to be any way to actually press them so I'm confused as to what their role is.



      What exactly are they for?










      share|improve this question















      This question already has an answer here:




      • How do you use Berlin crosswalk signal boxes?

        2 answers




      I've been to Germany twice now: Once to Berlin and once to Bielefeld.



      Both places had these yellow boxes with the same pattern at pedestrian crossings.



      enter image description here



      At first I thought they were to press for crossing, but there doesn't seem to be any way to actually press them so I'm confused as to what their role is.



      What exactly are they for?





      This question already has an answer here:




      • How do you use Berlin crosswalk signal boxes?

        2 answers








      germany






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Mar 22 at 11:30









      Pete LeamanPete Leaman

      8816




      8816




      marked as duplicate by phoog, Dirty-flow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo, Giorgio, choster Mar 22 at 16:11


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









      marked as duplicate by phoog, Dirty-flow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo, Giorgio, choster Mar 22 at 16:11


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
























          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          18














          They are an aid for the visually and aurally impaired.



          They vibrate when the light turns green.



          Please see this and this.






          share|improve this answer

































            7














            They are for the visual impaired people.
            Source



            The symbol means:




            2 Black Dots on top, and 1 on the bottom mean that the person wearing the symbol is visually impaired, 1 black dot on the top, and 2 on the bottom show that the person is deaf.




            There's a button on the bottom:




            Despite what many would think now, the button doesn’t make the light turn green any faster. What it does do is vibrate when the light turns green, and in some cases it even prolongs the time that the light stays green.







            share|improve this answer



















            • 13





              I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

              – O. R. Mapper
              Mar 22 at 12:26






            • 2





              I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

              – Jan
              Mar 22 at 13:12











            • The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

              – Joren Vandamme
              Mar 22 at 13:21






            • 1





              Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

              – Jan
              Mar 22 at 13:37






            • 1





              @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

              – glglgl
              Mar 22 at 14:51



















            3














            It's for visually impaired pedestrians. There is a button on the bottom of the box. Some of them are vibrating and others are beeping to indicate when you can cross the road.






            share|improve this answer






























              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              18














              They are an aid for the visually and aurally impaired.



              They vibrate when the light turns green.



              Please see this and this.






              share|improve this answer






























                18














                They are an aid for the visually and aurally impaired.



                They vibrate when the light turns green.



                Please see this and this.






                share|improve this answer




























                  18












                  18








                  18







                  They are an aid for the visually and aurally impaired.



                  They vibrate when the light turns green.



                  Please see this and this.






                  share|improve this answer















                  They are an aid for the visually and aurally impaired.



                  They vibrate when the light turns green.



                  Please see this and this.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Mar 22 at 11:45

























                  answered Mar 22 at 11:38









                  Weather VaneWeather Vane

                  1,919617




                  1,919617

























                      7














                      They are for the visual impaired people.
                      Source



                      The symbol means:




                      2 Black Dots on top, and 1 on the bottom mean that the person wearing the symbol is visually impaired, 1 black dot on the top, and 2 on the bottom show that the person is deaf.




                      There's a button on the bottom:




                      Despite what many would think now, the button doesn’t make the light turn green any faster. What it does do is vibrate when the light turns green, and in some cases it even prolongs the time that the light stays green.







                      share|improve this answer



















                      • 13





                        I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

                        – O. R. Mapper
                        Mar 22 at 12:26






                      • 2





                        I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:12











                      • The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

                        – Joren Vandamme
                        Mar 22 at 13:21






                      • 1





                        Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:37






                      • 1





                        @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

                        – glglgl
                        Mar 22 at 14:51
















                      7














                      They are for the visual impaired people.
                      Source



                      The symbol means:




                      2 Black Dots on top, and 1 on the bottom mean that the person wearing the symbol is visually impaired, 1 black dot on the top, and 2 on the bottom show that the person is deaf.




                      There's a button on the bottom:




                      Despite what many would think now, the button doesn’t make the light turn green any faster. What it does do is vibrate when the light turns green, and in some cases it even prolongs the time that the light stays green.







                      share|improve this answer



















                      • 13





                        I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

                        – O. R. Mapper
                        Mar 22 at 12:26






                      • 2





                        I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:12











                      • The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

                        – Joren Vandamme
                        Mar 22 at 13:21






                      • 1





                        Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:37






                      • 1





                        @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

                        – glglgl
                        Mar 22 at 14:51














                      7












                      7








                      7







                      They are for the visual impaired people.
                      Source



                      The symbol means:




                      2 Black Dots on top, and 1 on the bottom mean that the person wearing the symbol is visually impaired, 1 black dot on the top, and 2 on the bottom show that the person is deaf.




                      There's a button on the bottom:




                      Despite what many would think now, the button doesn’t make the light turn green any faster. What it does do is vibrate when the light turns green, and in some cases it even prolongs the time that the light stays green.







                      share|improve this answer













                      They are for the visual impaired people.
                      Source



                      The symbol means:




                      2 Black Dots on top, and 1 on the bottom mean that the person wearing the symbol is visually impaired, 1 black dot on the top, and 2 on the bottom show that the person is deaf.




                      There's a button on the bottom:




                      Despite what many would think now, the button doesn’t make the light turn green any faster. What it does do is vibrate when the light turns green, and in some cases it even prolongs the time that the light stays green.








                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Mar 22 at 11:43









                      Joren VandammeJoren Vandamme

                      720312




                      720312








                      • 13





                        I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

                        – O. R. Mapper
                        Mar 22 at 12:26






                      • 2





                        I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:12











                      • The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

                        – Joren Vandamme
                        Mar 22 at 13:21






                      • 1





                        Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:37






                      • 1





                        @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

                        – glglgl
                        Mar 22 at 14:51














                      • 13





                        I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

                        – O. R. Mapper
                        Mar 22 at 12:26






                      • 2





                        I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:12











                      • The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

                        – Joren Vandamme
                        Mar 22 at 13:21






                      • 1





                        Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

                        – Jan
                        Mar 22 at 13:37






                      • 1





                        @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

                        – glglgl
                        Mar 22 at 14:51








                      13




                      13





                      I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

                      – O. R. Mapper
                      Mar 22 at 12:26





                      I'm not sure the first quotation is true. For all my life (living in Germany), I was taught "a triangle made out of three black dots on yellow, that means blind", without any distinction of the orientation. And here's a website (in German) that describes the symbol for blind people, and both orientations appear in the photos on the page. It also cites a German law that, again, merely mentions "a yellow sign with three black dots", without specifying an orientation.

                      – O. R. Mapper
                      Mar 22 at 12:26




                      2




                      2





                      I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

                      – Jan
                      Mar 22 at 13:12





                      I have met a lot of deaf people in Germany and never seen one wearing this three dot symbol (Have not met one who is both deaf and blind, though). Why would a deaf person want to wear such a symbol? So you can tell him/her twice if she has not heard you the first time?

                      – Jan
                      Mar 22 at 13:12













                      The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

                      – Joren Vandamme
                      Mar 22 at 13:21





                      The idea behind it seems to be that traffic can see that someone is visually impaired/blind. It seems like it's only known in Austria and partly Germany. Someone asking if it exists outside of Germany: reddit.com/r/Blind/comments/8nv5bp/…

                      – Joren Vandamme
                      Mar 22 at 13:21




                      1




                      1





                      Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

                      – Jan
                      Mar 22 at 13:37





                      Re. that badge for deaf people: there were apparently times when wearing this was also common for deaf people. It is just really out of fashion now. link : "These badges are extremely rare nowadays. Deaf people find them rather discriminatory".

                      – Jan
                      Mar 22 at 13:37




                      1




                      1





                      @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

                      – glglgl
                      Mar 22 at 14:51





                      @O.R.Mapper But this law associates this symbol with "Körperlich Behinderte" (physically impaired people). It doesn't concentrate on visually impaired only.

                      – glglgl
                      Mar 22 at 14:51











                      3














                      It's for visually impaired pedestrians. There is a button on the bottom of the box. Some of them are vibrating and others are beeping to indicate when you can cross the road.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        3














                        It's for visually impaired pedestrians. There is a button on the bottom of the box. Some of them are vibrating and others are beeping to indicate when you can cross the road.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          3












                          3








                          3







                          It's for visually impaired pedestrians. There is a button on the bottom of the box. Some of them are vibrating and others are beeping to indicate when you can cross the road.






                          share|improve this answer













                          It's for visually impaired pedestrians. There is a button on the bottom of the box. Some of them are vibrating and others are beeping to indicate when you can cross the road.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Mar 22 at 11:37









                          Dirty-flowDirty-flow

                          10.6k1354112




                          10.6k1354112















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