List of public signage typefaces
This is a list of typefaces used for signage in public areas, such as roads and airports.
Typeface | Used by | Notes |
---|---|---|
Achemine | SNCF, France | Created in 2008 to improve station accessibility. |
Alfabeto Normale and Alfabeto Stretto | Italy | Alfabeto Normale ("Normal Alphabet") is a bolder variant of the British Transport typeface.[1] Alfabeto Stretto ("Narrow Alphabet") is a condensed version of Alfabeto Normale, and is used for long names that wouldn't fit otherwise. The typeface Traffic type Spain D,[2] used in Spain, is identical to Alfabeto Normale. |
Amsi Pro Sign | People's Republic of China | Developed to replace Chinese Highway Gothic typefaces, and also used in China and Taiwan. |
Antique Olive | California Department of Transportation | Some regulatory Signs |
Austria | Austria | road typeface |
Brusseline | Brussels' public transport company | |
Calvert | Tyne & Wear Metro, United Kingdom | |
Caractères | France | Used for road signs in France and in some countries in Africa. |
Carretera | General Directorate of Highways in Turkey | |
Casey | Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation | |
Clarendon | U.S. National Park Service road signs[3] | |
Clearview | Developed to replace U.S. FHWA (Federal Highway Administration) typefaces[3] | |
DIN 1451 | the German transport typeface | |
Drogowskaz | the Polish transport typeface | |
Esseltub | previously used in Stockholm Metro | |
Eurostile | California Department of Transportation | Some regulatory Signs |
FIP signage typeface | Government of Canada | A modified version of Helvetica Medium used by the Government of Canada[4] |
FF Meta | Stockholm Metro, California Department of Transportation | some Mile Marker Signs |
FF Fago | ADIF | Used as official font for signage system of all Spanish railway stations owned by the state-owned administrator, ADIF. |
Freight Sans | Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru, India | |
Frutiger | Swiss road signs Across the public transport network of Oslo, Norway |
|
Amtrak signage[6] | ||
FHWA Series fonts – sometimes called Highway Gothic.[3] | USA | Developed for U.S. road signage, and also used in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, the Netherlands, and New Zealand |
Futura BSK | Italian railways[7] | |
Gill Sans | British Railways until 1965. | Also the official font for all the signage system of the Spanish Government. |
Helvetica | New York City Subway system Chicago Transit Authority system |
Formerly used in Hong Kong's MTR and Stockholm Metro, has also been used on some Toronto Subway and RT station signage. Less commonly, the typeface has been used on street signs in the United States, most notably in some suburbs of the Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area parts of Pennsylvania, and Contra Costa County Transportation Authority |
Helvetica Neue | road signs in Hong Kong | |
Hiragino | East Nippon Expressway Co., Ltd. (NEXCO East Japan), Central Nippon Expressway Co., Ltd. (NEXCO Central Japan), and West Nippon Expressway Co., Ltd. (NEXCO West Japan) | Japan Highway Public Corporation (decided into three NEXCO group companies in 2005) had used its own Japan Highway Public Corporation Standard Text until 2010. Since 2010, Hiragino is used for main Japanese text, and Frutiger for numbers and Vialog for English text.[8] |
Johnston | Transport for London | |
LTA Identity Typeface | Singapore's Mass Rapid Transit[9] | |
Metrolis | Lisbon Metro | Custom font for the 1995 rebranding, designed by the Foundry (Freda Sack and David Quay) |
Metron | Prague Metro | Created in 1973 forby Jiří Rathouský |
Motorway | Motorway route numbers in the United Kingdom and Ireland | |
Myriad | Hong Kong's Mass Transit Railway | |
NPS Rawlinson | United States National Park Service | Developed as a replacement for Clarendon[3] |
Parisine | Paris Métro | |
Pragmatica | Saint Petersburg Metro since 2002; | currently (2010—11) is being replaced by Freeset, Cyrillic variation of Frutiger |
Rail Alphabet | British Rail, British Airports Authority, DSB, NHS | Designed for British Rail in 1964. Still in use on parts of the UK rail network, but mostly superseded elsewhere. |
Rotis Semi Sans | Metro Bilbao | used by its own creator, Otl Aicher, for the corporate design of Metro Bilbao |
Rotis Semi Serif | Station signs of Sound Transit[10] | |
Rotis Serif | Highway and street signposts in Singapore | |
Ruta CL | Chilean roads.[11] | Developed to replace Chilean Highway Gothic typefaces. |
Sispos and Sisneg | Sweden | Designed by Bo Berndal – old Swedish standard (SIS 030011, 1973) for public road signs, displays, etc. |
Standard (also known as Akzidenz-Grotesk) | New York City subway signgs | Sometimes seen on older New York City subway signs. Was sometimes used in place of Helvetica.[12]
|
Sweden Sans | Swedish Government | Commissioned by the Swedish government, and designed by Stefan Hattenbach with the partnership of Stockholm-based design agency Söderhavet, designed to represent "Swedishness" both abroad and at home, and aims to become default in official sites in Sweden.[13] |
Toronto Subway Font | Toronto Transit Commission | Used in maps, publications, and most stations of the Toronto Subway and RT |
Trafikkalfabetet ("The traffic alphabet") | Norway | Used for Norwegian road signs and (until 2002) motor vehicle registration plates |
Transport | British roads | Also used in Portugal, Greece and other countries |
Tratex | Road signs in Sweden | |
TS Info and TS Mapa | Transantiago | Created by the DET (Departamento de Estudios Tipográficos, Universidad Católica de Chile) for the Transantiago, the public transport network in Santiago de Chile. |
Univers | Montreal Metro | San Francisco's Bay Area Rapid Transit and the Walt Disney World Resort road system |
Vejtavleskrift ("Road sign typeface") | Road signs in Denmark[14] | |
Vialog | Renfe, directional signs on Japanese expressways | Used in signage and all corporative communications of the state-owned Spanish Railway Operator in a custom-made version called Renfe Vialog. |
See also
References
- ↑ Traffic Sign Typefaces: Italy http://opentype.info/blog/2009/02/09/traffic-sign-typefaces-italy/
- ↑ "Traffic Type Spain D - Desktop font « MyFonts". Myfonts.com. 1999-02-22. Retrieved 2012-11-09.
- 1 2 3 4 Joshua Yaffa (August 12, 2007). "The Road to Clarity". The New York Times.
- ↑ "4.5 Signage Typeface." FIP Manual. Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, n.d. Web. 17 August 2011. <http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/fip-pcim/man_4_5-eng.asp>.
- ↑
- ↑ "Branding Guidelines" (PDF). Amtrak. 2009-04-23. Retrieved 2012-03-07.
- ↑ http://www.rfi.it/cms/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=2e07ad846ea01210VgnVCM1000003f16f90aRCRD (Italian)
- ↑ East Nippon Expressway Co., Ltd. (NEXCO East Japan), Central Nippon Expressway Co., Ltd. (NEXCO Central Japan), and West Nippon Expressway Co., Ltd. (NEXCO West Japan)「より視認し易い高速道路案内標識を目指した 標識レイアウトの変更について」
- ↑ http://mic-ro.com/metro/files/LTAFont.pdf
- ↑ Two Twelve Harakawa Inc.; Maestri Design Inc.; Jon Bentz Design (September 2004). "System-Wide Signage Design Manual, Second Edition" (PDF). Sound Transit. p. DS-17. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
|chapter=
ignored (help) - ↑ "Manual de Señalización de Tránsito - Conaset". CONASET, Ministerioa de Transporter Telecomunicaciones. Feb 2015.
- ↑ … (2008-11-18). "The (Mostly) True Story of Helvetica and the New York City Subway". AIGA. Retrieved 2012-11-09.
- ↑ http://soderhavet.com/nyheter/sverige-har-fatt-ett-eget-typsnitt/ (Italian)
- ↑ http://www.trafikken.dk/wimpdoc.asp?page=document&objno=123041 (Danish) Q&A by the Danish road authority Archived November 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
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