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Lesson 5 of the Weather, Night Driving, Motorways, Rural Roads and Roadworks unit

French Category B Theory: Navigating Roadworks and Temporary Traffic Arrangements

This lesson focuses on the critical skills required to navigate active roadwork zones safely and legally according to the French Code de la route. You will learn how to prioritize temporary signage, adjust your speed, and handle lane changes during construction. Mastery of these rules is essential for both your ETG exam and daily driving safety.

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French Category B Theory: Navigating Roadworks and Temporary Traffic Arrangements

Lesson content overview

French Category B Theory

Navigating French Roadworks: Temporary Signs, Yellow Lines, and Rules of the Code de la Route

Active roadworks are among the most dynamic and high-risk environments you will encounter on French roads. Managing these areas safely requires heightened vigilance, an immediate reduction in speed, and a clear understanding of temporary traffic arrangements (aménagements temporaires de chantier).

Under the French Code de la route, temporary modifications are designed to protect vulnerable construction personnel while systematically guiding vehicles through altered or narrowed lanes. This lesson covers the identification, interpretation, and legal obligations required to navigate roadwork zones safely, helping you prepare thoroughly for the French Category B driving theory exam (Examen de l'Éthique Générale or ETG).


Introduction to Temporary Traffic Arrangements (TTA)

Temporary Traffic Arrangements (TTAs) are provisional modifications made to the standard road infrastructure. They are deployed whenever construction, maintenance, or emergency repairs take place on or near the roadway.

The primary objective of a TTA is dual: to maintain a predictable, organized flow of traffic and to establish a highly secure barrier between moving vehicles and road workers. Because construction zones introduce unexpected hazards—such as machinery moving at low speeds, loose gravel, altered lane widths, and pedestrians in high-vis vests—the standard rules of the road are temporarily modified.

As a driver preparing for your French driving licence, you must treat any temporary arrangement as an active hazard zone. This means your visual scanning must expand, your following distance must increase, and your speed must drop immediately upon spotting the first warning signs.


The Hierarchy of French Road Markings: Why Yellow Lines Take Precedence

In France, road markings follow a strict legal hierarchy. During roadworks, the standard white paint on the asphalt can become misleading if lanes are shifted or narrowed. To prevent contradictory instructions, authorities use temporary road markings.

Warning

Crucial Rule for the ETG: Yellow horizontal markings always supersede standard white markings. When yellow lines are present, you must completely ignore the permanent white lines underneath them.

Types of Yellow Horizontal Markings and Their Meaning

Yellow markings are applied either using highly visible temporary paint or retroreflective adhesive strips. They are designed to stand out vividly in all lighting conditions.

  • Continuous Yellow Lines: Just like a permanent solid white line, a solid yellow line represents a strict prohibition. You are legally forbidden from crossing a continuous yellow line, except when explicitly directed to do so by a police officer, a designated traffic controller, or a specific regulatory sign. These lines often mark the temporary boundaries of a narrowed lane or isolate a closed portion of the roadway.
  • Broken Yellow Lines: These indicate temporary lane boundaries or guide traffic through a lane shift (basculement de circulation). You may cross them to change lanes or adjust your position, provided it is safe to do so and you have signaled your intention.
  • Yellow Zigzag Lines: Occasionally used near work zones to denote temporary bus stops or delivery areas that must remain clear of general traffic.
  • Yellow Arrow Markings: Applied directly onto the lanes to indicate mandatory directional shifts or to warn drivers that their current lane is ending, requiring a merge.

If you cross a solid yellow line illegally, you face the same legal penalties as crossing a solid white line under the Code de la route, which includes monetary fines and a reduction of points on your driving licence.


Temporary Road Signs (Signalisation Temporaire)

Temporary road signs in France are instantly recognizable by their distinct color scheme. While permanent warning signs feature a white background with a red border, temporary signs feature a yellow background with a red border. This color shift serves as an immediate visual cue that the hazard ahead is provisional.

Crucial Warning and Regulatory Signs for Roadworks

When driving, you must recognize and obey these signs immediately. They are placed at specific intervals before the work zone to give you ample time to react.

In addition to warning signs, regulatory signs—such as speed limit reductions—are frequently placed on yellow-backed supports or temporary tripods.

Treat all temporary signs as binding. Assuming that a temporary speed limit is "only advisory" because no workers are currently visible is a common and dangerous mistake that results in heavy penalties.


Managing Temporary Traffic Lights and Alternating Traffic (Alternat)

When roadworks reduce a two-way road down to a single operational lane, traffic must pass through the bottleneck one direction at a time. This system is known in France as an alternat.

An alternat is regulated using one of three methods:

  1. Mobile Traffic Lights (Feux de chantier): These are portable, yellow-bodied traffic lights positioned at each end of the work zone. They operate on a timer or sensor system. You must treat these lights with the same absolute obedience as permanent traffic lights. A red light requires a complete stop at the designated line or level with the light post.
  2. Manual Paddles (Piquets de chantier K10): Construction workers use hand-held paddles to regulate flow manually. One side of the paddle is green (indicating Section Libre - proceed with caution), and the other side is red (indicating Halte - stop). You must follow the operator's hand signals and paddle indications immediately.
  3. Priority Rules: On short, highly visible stretches without lights or paddles, priority signs (such as the B15 and C18 signs) dictate which direction must yield.

Note

If a mobile traffic light is out of order or flashing amber in the middle unit, you must proceed with extreme caution, yield to any oncoming traffic already in the bottleneck, and give absolute priority to construction vehicles exiting the work zone.


Construction-Zone Speed Limits and Fines

Speed limits in French construction zones are strictly enforced to protect the lives of those working on the asphalt. The Code de la route mandates a reduction in speed, which is adjusted based on the type of road and the proximity of the work to active traffic.

Why a 30 km/h Limit is the Standard Default

In urban areas and highly congested departmental roads, the speed limit is almost universally reduced to 30 km/h within the immediate vicinity of the work site.

This drastic reduction is rooted in simple physics:

  • Stopping Distance: At 30 km/h, your total stopping distance (reaction distance + braking distance) is approximately 13 metres on dry pavement. At 50 km/h, that distance nearly doubles to 26 metres.
  • Survival Rate: If a collision occurs between a vehicle and a worker, the probability of the worker surviving is significantly higher at 30 km/h compared to higher speeds.

On major expressways or motorways (autoroutes), speed limits are stepped down gradually. For example, a standard 130 km/h limit may be reduced first to 110 km/h, then to 90 km/h, and finally to 70 km/h or 50 km/h through the active lane shift or narrowing.


Mastering Detours (Déviations) and Lane Closures

When a road is completely blocked due to heavy construction, resurfacing, or structural repairs, authorities implement a detour, known as a déviation.

How to Navigate a Detour Successfully

  1. Scan Ahead: Look for the yellow triangular warning signs (AK5) or specific Déviation information panels placed several hundred metres before the intersection.

  2. Reduce Speed: Slow down to give yourself time to read the destination names listed on the temporary yellow directional signs (KD1).

  3. Follow the Yellow Arrows: Follow the succession of yellow directional arrow signs. Do not rely solely on your GPS, as navigation systems may not have real-time updates for sudden, localized detours.

  4. Maintain High Vigilance: Detour routes often divert traffic onto smaller departmental or municipal roads that are not built for heavy traffic flows. Anticipate narrow bends, passing challenges, and temporary priority changes.

Dealing with Lane Shifts and Merging Sequences

When a lane is closed, drivers must merge into the remaining open lane. To maintain flow and prevent gridlock, you should practice cooperative merging, often referred to as the zipper merge (principe de la fermeture éclair).

Instead of merging too early—which creates a long, single-file backup and leaves unused road space—drivers should continue in their respective lanes up to the merge point (indicated by the yellow barrier or cones) and then alternate taking turns to merge. This keeps traffic moving smoothly and reduces overall congestion.


In France, roadworkers, emergency responders, and patrol personnel are highly vulnerable. The Code de la route places a strict, explicit legal burden on drivers to ensure their safety.

Article R413-28 of the Code de la Route

This article specifies that drivers must adjust their speed and driving behavior not only in response to signs but also in response to the physical presence of workers or equipment on the road or its shoulders.

  • Yielding Right of Way: You must yield to construction vehicles equipped with flashing blue or orange lights when they are entering or exiting a work zone.
  • Lateral Safety Distance: When passing a worker or stationary utility vehicle on the shoulder, you must maximize the lateral distance between your car and the worker. If possible, move over to the adjacent lane, provided it is safe and legal to do so.
  • The 'Safety Buffer' Rule: In many European jurisdictions, including France, drivers are encouraged or required to slow down significantly and change lanes away from any vehicle stopped on the shoulder with active warning beacons (the corridor de sécurité rule).

Environmental and Safety Adjustments

Roadwork zones present different challenges depending on visibility, weather, and the presence of other road users.

Night Driving and Low Visibility

At night, roadworks become exceptionally hazardous. While temporary signs are highly reflective, the visual clutter of flashing amber beacons, bright halogen construction lights, and reflective cones can easily disorient you.

  • Headlight Use: Ensure your dipped beam headlights (feux de croisement) are active. Avoid using high beams (feux de route), as they can blind workers and reflect off temporary yellow signs, glaring back into your eyes.
  • Clean Windscreen: A dirty windscreen amplifies glare from construction lights. Ensure your washers are functioning.

Adverse Weather Conditions

Wet weather drastically alters the physics of a construction zone.

  • Slippery Yellow Lines: The temporary adhesive tape used for yellow lane markings can become highly slippery when wet. Avoid sudden braking or sharp steering inputs while crossing these markings.
  • Loose Gravel: Roadworks often leave behind loose gravel (gravillons). Wet conditions combined with loose gravel drastically reduce tyre traction, increasing your risk of skidding and throwing up stones that could crack windshields. Double your following distance.

Vulnerable Road Users

In urban areas, construction often blocks sidewalks and cycle paths, forcing pedestrians, wheelchair users, and cyclists directly into the main vehicular traffic lane.

  • Anticipate Sudden Movements: Be prepared for a cyclist to swerve into your path to avoid a barrier.
  • Give Wide Berth: Always maintain a minimum passing distance of 1 metre in urban areas and 1.5 metres in rural areas when passing cyclists or pedestrians forced onto the road.

Common Violations and Penalties in French Construction Zones

Failing to comply with temporary traffic rules carries severe legal and safety consequences. The table below outlines common errors made by drivers and the corresponding risks under French traffic law.

ViolationImmediate HazardLegal Consequence / Penalty
Crossing a solid yellow lineHead-on collision with oncoming traffic or hitting a worker.Class 4 fine, deduction of 3 points from your licence.
Exceeding temporary speed limitsInability to stop for unexpected obstacles; severe injury to workers.Variable fines, point deductions, and potential licence suspension.
Ignoring temporary red lightsSevere t-bone or head-on collisions inside narrow single-lane bottlenecks.Class 4 fine, deduction of 4 points from your licence, potential suspension.
Overtaking in a roadwork zoneSide-swiping vehicles or crashing into temporary barriers due to restricted lane width.Prohibited when solid yellow lines or specific "no overtaking" signs are active.
Failing to follow a mandatory detourDriving into active excavation zones, asphalt pavers, or closed bridges.Fine for non-compliance with regulatory signage.

By mastering these rules, prioritizing the safety of roadworkers, and adapting your speed immediately, you ensure a safe passage through any roadworks zone and move one step closer to successfully obtaining your French Category B driving licence.


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Frequently asked questions about Navigating Roadworks and Temporary Traffic Arrangements

Find clear answers to common questions learners have about Navigating Roadworks and Temporary Traffic Arrangements. Learn how the lesson is structured, which driving theory objectives it supports, and how it fits into the overall learning path of units and curriculum progression in France. These explanations help you understand key concepts, lesson flow, and exam focused study goals.

Do yellow road lines override white lines in France?

Yes. When roadworks are in place, temporary yellow lines take precedence over existing permanent white lines. You must follow the direction and restrictions indicated by the yellow markings.

Are the speed limits in roadwork zones always mandatory?

Yes. Any speed limit posted on a temporary sign within a construction zone is legally binding and must be strictly followed to ensure the safety of road workers and traffic flow.

What should I do if a temporary sign contradicts permanent signage?

Always prioritize the temporary sign. Temporary traffic signals and signs are specifically installed to manage the current, modified traffic situation, which may be different from standard road rules.

How do I handle merging in a construction lane shift?

Merge early and smoothly if you see signs indicating a lane closure. Respect the zipper merge principle if traffic is heavy, but always prioritize the guidance provided by temporary arrows or cones.

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