Detectable Design

Visibility guide for Park Slope

Intersections to watch, local backdrops, and clothing colors that stand out in low light.

Intersections to watch

Most concerning intersections in Park Slope, based on crash history and other road risk factors.

  1. 3rd Avenue & 22nd Street
    unsignalized crossingno bike facilityhigher speed road
  2. 3rd Avenue & 18th Street
    fatal crash history nearbyunsignalized crossingno bike facility
  3. 2nd Avenue & Hamilton Avenue
    higher speed roadunsignalized crossingno bike facility
  4. 18th Street & Hamilton Avenue
    fatal crash history nearbyunsignalized crossingno bike facility
  5. Court Street & Hamilton Avenue
    fatal crash history nearbyunsignalized crossingno bike facility

Colors to wear

These colors tend to stand out best against the local street background.

Best colors
WhiteYellowLight Gray
Hardest colors to see
CharcoalDark GrayBlack

If you own high-vis gear

High-vis gear still performs best overall here. If you own it, start with the top options below.

Bright White Fluorescent Yellow

Only have dark clothing?

  • Add reflective details at ankles, wrists, or other moving points.
  • Add a lighter outer layer if you have one.
  • Use lights as well if you are biking or moving near traffic in low light.

How colors compare

Relative to average high-vis

These percentages show how each regular clothing color compares with the average high-vis option in local street scenes.

1
White best overall
relative to average high-vis 99%
0.50 avg score
2
Yellow strong fallback
relative to average high-vis 91%
0.43 avg score
3
Light Gray
relative to average high-vis 87%
0.41 avg score
4
Light Blue
relative to average high-vis 85%
0.40 avg score
5
Beige
relative to average high-vis 79%
0.37 avg score
6
Orange
relative to average high-vis 77%
0.36 avg score
7
Pink
relative to average high-vis 77%
0.36 avg score
8
Red
relative to average high-vis 66%
0.31 avg score
9
Blue
relative to average high-vis 62%
0.29 avg score
10
Purple
relative to average high-vis 50%
0.23 avg score

Rows are ordered by how close each color gets to the average high-vis benchmark.

Local backdrop

Local backdrop elements

Brick / warm surfaces
59% of photos
Vegetation
20% of photos

Why this works

In Park Slope low light conditions, white comes closest to high-visibility performance from a normal closet, while bright white and fluorescent yellow still lead the true high-visibility benchmark.

Common questions

What color is most visible in Park Slope low light?

White is the strongest regular clothing color in this local street-scene comparison.

What colors should I avoid here?

Charcoal, Dark Gray, Black are harder to distinguish against the sampled local backdrops.

Is this a safety guarantee?

This guidance is based on local street-scene analysis and general visibility principles. It is not a prediction of crash risk or a guarantee of safety.

Why local results differ

  • Brick, vegetation, glass, painted surfaces, asphalt, sky, and shade can change which clothing colors separate from the background.
  • Daytime pages weigh color contrast against the local backdrop; low-light pages are more conservative and emphasize brightness, reflectivity, and lights.
  • Routes with tunnels, tree cover, rain, dusk, or heavy traffic can differ from the average local image sample.

What to do

  • Add reflective details at ankles, wrists, or other moving points so drivers catch motion early.
  • Keep at least one high-contrast element on your torso.
  • If you are biking, use a front white light and rear red light in addition to reflective details.

If you are choosing from regular clothing, start with white and add reflective details at moving points. It lands at about 99% of the average high-vis score here.

If you are packing one option for Park Slope low light conditions, make it white if that is what you already own. If you have high-vis gear, bright white still performs best overall.

Data confidence: high.

Data last updated: 2026-04-27

Examples

Images from the local dataset to show the local background.

Street-level low light example from Park Slope Nyc, cropped to show the local street context.
Street-level low light example from Park Slope Nyc, cropped to show the local street context.
Street-level low light example from Park Slope Nyc, cropped to show the local street context.