Westbrook has a mix of residential streets, retail corridors, and higher-traffic intersections. That combination creates recurring fact patterns in pedestrian injury claims, such as:
- Commuter timing and traffic flow: drivers may be accelerating into intersections after stops, or turning while scanning for gaps in moving traffic.
- Tourist/errand foot traffic: more people walking to nearby destinations can increase the risk at crosswalks, curb cuts, and driveway edges.
- Weather and visibility: Maine winters, glare off snow, wet leaves, and early-dark conditions can affect whether a driver could reasonably see and stop.
- Construction and roadway changes: detours, lane shifts, and temporary signage can make it harder for drivers to perceive a pedestrian in time.
Those factors matter because fault and damages often turn on timing, sightlines, road design, and what was reasonable under the conditions.


