Red, Yellow, Green Audiobook By Pierce Jumper cover art

Red, Yellow, Green

How Traffic Lights Tamed the Streets and Shaped Modern Cities

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Red, Yellow, Green

By: Pierce Jumper
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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This title uses virtual voice narration

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What if one of the most important inventions in modern history was something we barely notice?

We hurry beneath them. We wait beside them. We watch them change without thinking. Yet traffic lights shape our cities, our commutes, our neighborhoods, and the way we share space with strangers.

In Red, Yellow, Green: How Traffic Lights Tamed the Streets and Shaped Modern Cities, we step into the surprisingly dramatic story of how these three glowing colors came to govern the movement of the world.

Before traffic lights, city streets were unruly and unpredictable. Horses, streetcars, pedestrians, and the rise of the automobile collided—literally—in chaotic intersections. Injury and frustration were common. Cities needed a new kind of order.

That order arrived not through force, but through design.

This book traces the evolution of traffic signals from:

  • The earliest gas-lit semaphore in 1868 London

  • To the first electric signals built by police officers in dusty workshops

  • To the invention of the yellow light in Detroit

  • To synchronized “green wave” traffic systems

  • To today’s smart, sensor-driven, AI-coordinated intersections

Along the way, it explores:

  • The psychology of why we obey (or challenge) signals

  • Why some cities favor pedestrians and others favor cars

  • How crosswalks became symbols of dignity and belonging

  • Why Japan’s “go” signal looks more blue than green

  • Why some cities remove traffic lights entirely — and the streets become safer

This is not just a book about infrastructure.
It is a book about trust.

Traffic lights work because strangers believe others will follow the same rules. They are everyday evidence that cooperation is possible—even between people who will never meet.

Perfect for readers who enjoy:

  • City and urban history

  • Design and architecture

  • Culture and social psychology

  • Transportation, planning, or engineering

  • Curious nonfiction that finds meaning in everyday things

Thoughtful, surprising, and richly human, Red, Yellow, Green reveals how a tiny invention quietly changed the shape of the modern world.

Engineering Transportation Detroit Technology
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