Roanoke is built around commuting routes, suburban intersections, and neighborhood streets where visibility can change quickly—especially around shift changes, early-morning rides, and busy afternoons when drivers are focused on getting to work.
In many bicycle crash cases, the dispute isn’t whether the rider was hurt—it’s what the driver did (or didn’t do) in the seconds before impact. That’s why the early record matters so much in Roanoke:
- Traffic signal timing and turning lanes: Left turns and rolling stops near intersections can become the center of a liability fight.
- Lighting and sightlines: Dawn/evening rides can make it harder to prove what was visible when.
- Construction and resurfacing: Road work can affect bike lane continuity, add debris, and change stopping distances.
- Neighborhood “cut-through” traffic: Drivers may enter residential areas expecting lower bike presence.


