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Battenburg markings



 
 
Battenburg refers to a pattern of high-visibility markings used to maximise conspicuity, primarily on the emergency service
Emergency service

Emergency services are organizations which ensure public safety by addressing different emergencies. Some agencies exist solely for addressing certain types of emergencies whilst others deal with ad hoc emergencies as part of their normal responsibilities....
 vehicles but also in other applications such as uniforms. It is named after the battenberg cake, which has similar markings.
enburg markings were originally developed in the mid-1990s by the Police Scientific Development Branch (PDSB) (now the Home Office Scientific Development Branch (HOSDB)) at the request of the national motorway policing sub-committee of the Association of Chief Police Officers
Association of Chief Police Officers

The Association of Chief Police Officers , established in 1948, is the lead organisation for developing police policy in England, Wales and Northern Ireland ....
.






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Battenburg refers to a pattern of high-visibility markings used to maximise conspicuity, primarily on the emergency service
Emergency service

Emergency services are organizations which ensure public safety by addressing different emergencies. Some agencies exist solely for addressing certain types of emergencies whilst others deal with ad hoc emergencies as part of their normal responsibilities....
 vehicles but also in other applications such as uniforms. It is named after the battenberg cake, which has similar markings.

History

Battenburg markings were originally developed in the mid-1990s by the Police Scientific Development Branch (PDSB) (now the Home Office Scientific Development Branch (HOSDB)) at the request of the national motorway policing sub-committee of the Association of Chief Police Officers
Association of Chief Police Officers

The Association of Chief Police Officers , established in 1948, is the lead organisation for developing police policy in England, Wales and Northern Ireland ....
. They were first developed for the United Kingdom police forces to use on traffic patrol cars, although other private organisations and civil emergency services have since started to use the pattern on their vehicles. The brief was to create a livery for motorway and trunk road police
Highway patrol

A highway patrol is either a police unit created primarily for the purpose of overseeing and enforcing traffic safety compliance on roads and highways, such as the California Highway Patrol, or a detail within an existing local or regional police agency that is primarily concerned with such duties, such as the HWP units of Australian state p...
 vehicles which would maximise the visibility of the vehicles when stopped on scene, both in daylight, and under headlights from a minimum distance of 500 m, and which would distinctively mark it as a police car.

The key research objectives included:
  • "Enhance officer and public safety by reducing the likelihood of road accidents where conspicuity of the police vehicle is a factor"
  • "Be recognisable as a police vehicle up to a distance of 500 metres in normal daylight"
  • "Assist in high visibility policing so as to reassure the public and enhance the potential deterrent benefits of proactive traffic patrol activity"


The research showed the human eye is most sensitive to blue/green shades at night and yellow/green in daylight. The battenburg design typically comprises 2 or more rows of alternating retroreflective
Retroreflector

A retroreflector is a device or surface that Reflection light back to its source with a minimum scattering of light. An electromagnetic wave front is reflected back along a vector that is parallel to but opposite in direction from the wave's source....
 squares or blocks, usually starting with yellow at the top, then the alternating colour, along the sides of a vehicle. The battenburg livery is not used on the rear of vehicles, with the majority of users using upward facing chevrons in yellow and red to the rear, in line with the markings used by other road users. Whilst most cars use only two rows in the design, larger vehicles can be marked with more rows.

Sillitoe Tartan

During the development of battenburg markings, one of the key functions was to clearly identify a vehicle as being linked to the police. In addition to the advantages in effectiveness tests, the pattern was also reminiscent of the Sillitoe Tartan
Sillitoe Tartan

Sillitoe Tartan is the name given to the distinctive chequered pattern commonly associated with police in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and some other countries....
 pattern of black-and-white or blue-and-white chequered markings, first introduced by City of Glasgow Police
City of Glasgow Police

The City of Glasgow Police is the first professional police force in modern history. In the 17th century, Scotland cities used to hire watchmen to guard the streets at night, augmenting a force of unpaid citizen constables....
 in the 1930s, and subsequently adopted as a symbol of police services as far away as Chicago
Chicago Police Department

The Chicago Police Department, also known as the CPD, is the principal Police Law enforcement agency of the City of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States, under the jurisdiction of the Mayor of Chicago....
 and Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
.

Subsequent to the launch of the markings of the vehicles, the police introduced retro-reflective versions of the Sillitoe tartan markings to their uniforms, usually in blue and white, rather than blue and yellow used on vehicles.

Usage

In the United Kingdom, the majority of the emergency services have adopted the battenburg style of markings, with nearly half of all police forces adopting the markings within three years of its introduction, and over three quarters using it by 2003.

In 2004, following the widespread adoption and recognition of the battenburg markings on police vehicles, the Home Office subsequently recommended that all police vehicles, not just those on traffic duty, be marked up with a 'half-battenburg' livery which formalised a position which had already been undertaken by a number of forces.

In the United Kingdom, the emergency services have chosen or been given certain colours which identify them, with the police continuing to use the blue, whereas ambulances tend to use green and the fire service use red.

The use of these colours in retro-reflective material is controlled by the Road Vehicle Lighting Regulations 1989, with vehicles only legally allowed the use of yellow retro-reflective material, although the emergency services operate under temporary special orders under section 44 of the Road Traffic Act 1988 to use their own colours, with moves currently underway to formalise this in legislation and extend the use of other colours to civilian operators. However, a number of civilian organisations have adopted the pattern, which is not legally protected, and a number of these also use other retro-reflective colours.

An alternative to the use of retro-reflective materials is the use of fluorescent markings, or other non-reflective markings, which at least in the United Kingdom can be used by any vehicle, regardless of ownership or purpose.

Common battenburg markings

Common battenburg markings
used in the United Kingdom
Police Yellow / Blue
Ambulance and doctors Yellow / Green
Fire and Rescue
Fire service in the United Kingdom

The fire service in the United Kingdom operates under separate legislative and administrative arrangements in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales....
Yellow / Red
National Blood Service
National Blood Service

The National Blood Service is the organisation for England and North Wales which collects blood and other tissues, tests, processes, and supplies all the hospitals in England and North Wales....
Yellow / Orange
Highways Agency
Highways Agency

The Highways Agency is an executive agency, part of the Department for Transport in the United Kingdom. It has responsibility for managing the core road network in England....
 and VOSA
Yellow / Black
Rail response
Network Rail

Network Rail is a United Kingdom "not for dividend" company limited by guarantee whose principal asset is Network Rail Infrastructure Limited, a company limited by shares....
 or Civil Defence
Civil defense

Civil defense, civil defence or civil protection is an effort to prepare civilians for military attack. It uses the principles of emergency operations: prevention, mitigation, preparation, response, or emergency evacuation, and recovery....
Blue / Orange
Mountain rescue
Mountain rescue in England and Wales

File:Batternburg-mountain.svgMountain Rescue services in England and Wales operate under the umbrella association of the MREW - ....
White / Orange
HM Coastguard Yellow / Navy Blue


Other countries


Hong Kong


Some emergency vehicles and special vehicles in the Hong Kong Fire Service used Battenburg markings.

  • Mobile Casualty Treatment Centre
  • Hazmat Tender
  • Mobile Publicity Unit
  • Ambulances
  • Emergency Medical Assistant Motor Cycle


New Zealand

The New Zealand Police
New Zealand Police

The New Zealand Police is the national police force of New Zealand, responsible for enforcing criminal and traffic law, enhancing public safety, maintaining order and keeping the peace throughout New Zealand....
 liveries are checkered Battenburg markings yellow and blue as well as cars in standard factory colours. Formerly until October 2008, orange and blue were for general duties vehicles while yellow and blue was reserved for highway patrol units.

Sweden

Originally Swedish Police vehicle were painted black and white
Black and white (slang)

Black and white is an American slang term for a police car that is painted in large panels of black and white. Historically, this scheme was much favored by North American police forces because it allowed the unambiguous recognition of patrol units from a significant distance....
 but in the reverse of the Los Angeles Police Department
Los Angeles Police Department

The Los Angeles Police Department is the law enforcement agency of the city of Los Angeles, California, California. With nearly 9,900 officers and more than 3,000 female staff, covering an area of with a population of more than 3.8 million people, it is the fifth largest law enforcement agency in the United States ....
 pattern. Swedish police vehicles had black roofs and doors or black roofs, bonnet and boot. This was a necessity due to the heavy snows Sweden acquires. During the 1980's the cars became white with the word "Polis" written on the side in a semi-futuristic font. Later they became just blue and white and in 2005 they changed to a light blue and fluorescent yellow livery (Battenburg markings). Most Swedish police cars are either Volvos or Saabs, with the same livery all over Sweden.

Switzerland


The First Swiss Ambulanz Service with battenburg markings is the EMS
Ems

The Ems is a river in northwestern Germany and northeastern Netherlands. It runs through the States of Germany of North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony it parallels the state border between the Lower Saxon area of East Friesland and the province of Groningen , on the German side of the border....
 service in Zofingen
Zofingen

Zofingen is a city in the canton of Aargau in Switzerland, with a population of 10,534 . The municipalties of Switzerland has an area of 1 E7 m?....
. Since 2008 they have battenburg markings on a Volkswagen Crafter
Volkswagen Crafter

The Volkswagen Crafter, introduced in 2006, is the largest 3 to 5 tonne van sold by Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles. Crafter replaced the 31 year old Volkswagen LT nameplate....
 and a Mercedes Sprinter
Mercedes-Benz Sprinter

The Mercedes-Benz Sprinter is a delivery van, chassis cab and minibus built by Daimler AG in D?sseldorf, Germany and Buenos Aires, Argentina and sold worldwide as a Mercedes-Benz model, except in North America where it is built from Complete_knock_down kits and sold as a Dodge and as a Freightliner LLC....
. They use white/red coloured markings on their ALS
Advanced Life Support

Advanced Life Support - Implies that an EMT is capable of performing advanced life support skills as either an EMT-I or an EMT-P , commonly referred to simply as a paramedic or medic....
 units. Another service with a kind of battenburg markings is the Swiss Border Patrol. They use lemon on blue markings.

Gallery


See also

  • Emergency medical services in the United Kingdom
  • Fire service in the United Kingdom
    Fire service in the United Kingdom

    The fire service in the United Kingdom operates under separate legislative and administrative arrangements in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales....
  • List of police forces in the United Kingdom
    List of police forces in the United Kingdom

    There are a number of Law enforcement in the United Kingdom. There are four general types mostly concerned with policing the general public and their activities and a number of others concerned with policing of other, usually localised, matters....
  • Blues and twos
    Blues and twos

    Blues and twos is a colloquial term that refers to the emergency vehicle equipment of combined flashing lights as well as sirens that the emergency services in the UK use when responding to an incident....
  • Black and white (slang)
    Black and white (slang)

    Black and white is an American slang term for a police car that is painted in large panels of black and white. Historically, this scheme was much favored by North American police forces because it allowed the unambiguous recognition of patrol units from a significant distance....
  • Panda car
    Panda car

    The phrase panda car refers to a small or medium-sized police car operated by Policing in the United Kingdom. They are used for ordinary patrol work, with larger and more powerful vehicles being used for emergency response, Road Policing Unit duties and as Armed Response Vehicles...
  • Jam sandwich (slang)


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