Maryland Heights sits along major travel corridors and connects to St. Louis-area commuting routes. That matters because pedestrian injuries often happen around:
- Busy intersections and turn lanes where drivers are focused on traffic flow
- Signalized crossings near shopping and dining areas
- Sidewalk activity in residential pockets when visibility drops (night, rain, glare)
- Construction and traffic-control changes that can shift traffic patterns and pedestrian routes
In these situations, disputes often aren’t about whether you were hurt—they’re about how quickly the driver could have seen you, whether they yielded properly, and what the road conditions allowed. Local evidence—traffic signal timing, nearby signage, lighting, and witness vantage points—can make or break the story.


