Miramar sits along major travel routes and near shopping, dining, and employment centers. That means pedestrian injuries often occur in predictable “hot spots,” such as:
- Turning movements near retail areas (drivers cutting across a crosswalk or failing to yield)
- Commute-time crashes when visibility is reduced by traffic density and speed
- Work zones and lane changes where drivers have less time to detect pedestrians
- Night or late-evening impacts where lighting, glare, and reflective signage affect what drivers could reasonably see
In these scenarios, it’s common for insurers to argue the pedestrian was where they “shouldn’t” have been or that the driver acted reasonably. Strong claims in Miramar depend on proving what the driver saw (or should have seen) and how quickly they could have stopped.


