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Heraklion Now Has Smart Pedestrian Crossings

Heraklion completes 8km of sidewalks and 27 elevated crossings, while launching 19 new solar-powered smart pedestrian crossings at school zones.

  • Construction of 27 elevated pedestrian crossings is entering the final phase at major city intersections.
  • A new initiative launches to install 19 “Smart” crossings equipped with LED sensors and solar power.
  • Over 8 kilometers of new sidewalks have been completed to secure school perimeters.
  • Projects are funded via the Recovery and Resilience Fund in collaboration with the Technical Chamber of Greece.

Heraklion has entered a bold new era: pedestrians may now attempt to cross the street and live to tell the story. For years, the narrow gaps between idling cars and moving traffic near school gates have been a source of anxiety for parents. Now, the city is finishing a massive infrastructure puzzle, laying down 8 kilometers of fresh pavement and elevating the very ground pedestrians walk on to force a change in driver behavior.

The Rise of the Elevated Crossing

The strategy is physical: if you can’t make them look, make them feel. Twenty-seven new elevated crossings are being finalized and designed to serve as both visual cues and physical speed deterrents. These aren’t just patches of asphalt; each site involves integrated drainage systems to prevent the inevitable Mediterranean downpours from pooling at the curbs, along with standardized vertical and horizontal signage.

Where the Ground is Rising:

  • Phinikos & Patriarchou Photiou: 1 crossing
  • Atlantidos & Lappa: 1 crossing
  • M. Archangelou – Levinou & D. Fragkiadaki: 3 crossings
  • Papa-Petrou Gavala & Foustalieri – Pallada: 2 crossings
  • Prokopidi – Pytheos – Keramou: 2 crossings
  • Ergotelous – Nikis & V. Ipeirou: 2 crossings

Intelligence on the Asphalt

Beyond the concrete and asphalt, a digital layer is being added to the city’s most sensitive zones. Nineteen smart pedestrian crossings are currently breaking ground outside school complexes. Funded by the Recovery and Resilience Fund, these installations turn a simple walk across the street into an interactive safety event.

At the push of a button, traffic data sensors trigger in-road LED lighting and solar-powered vertical signs. The goal is to provide an unmistakable warning to approaching drivers and illuminate the path exactly when a student is in motion.

Key Features of the Smart Grid:

  • LED Integration: Lighting embedded directly into the road surface.
  • Solar Power: Photovoltaic panels to power vertical warning signs.
  • Tactile Design: Specialized color-coded markings and sidewalk paving for accessibility.
  • Sensor Logic: Real-time traffic data collection at each crossing.

The rollout targets some of the city’s busiest educational hubs. From the 6th and 44th Primary Schools on Meramvellou to the Model Junior High on Gianni Kornarou, the grid is designed to create “safe bubbles” around the city’s youth. And here’s the “read between the lines” fine print:

Twenty-seven crossings.

Not twenty-seven thousand. Not even two hundred. Twenty-seven.

And somehow this arrives wrapped in a full-blown press release, as if Heraklion has just reinvented urban life instead of catching up with what most places figured out decades ago—pedestrians shouldn’t have to gamble with traffic.

Sidewalks are presented as a breakthrough. Buttons that light up are treated as an innovation, with the subtext “Look, we finally noticed people walk.”

And yes, over in Rethymno, the same revelation is unfolding, as if the concept might spread if handled gently.

It would be funny if it weren’t so late.

No one’s complaining about safer streets—of course, this is needed. But celebrating the bare minimum like it’s a technological triumph is… revealing.

So press the button. Watch the lights perform their little show. Enjoy the upgraded illusion of order.

And then, like everyone who lives here already knows—look both ways and assume nothing.

Categories: Crete
Kostas Raptis: Kostas Raptis is a reporter living in Heraklion, Crete, where he covers the fast-moving world of AI and smart technology. He first discovered the island in 2016 and never quite forgot it—finally making the move in 2022. Now based in the city he once only dreamed of calling home, Kostas brings a curious eye and a human touch to the stories shaping our digital future.
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