I thought it would be pretty cool and funny to set this as a power on/off button for a computer but I don't know if normal people are allowed to buy it.
Perhaps have a word with the local Council and see if they have any old ones knocking about. They might pass you on to Highways England depending on who's remit this falls under.
It might also be worth contacting a few salvage yards - this one has a lot of street furniture and that includes pedestrian wait push buttons for £35, part of their pedestrian crossing parts section. Although as scrap yards list on eBay these days - pedestrian crossing boxes go for about £60 with one or two up for bids at lower prices.
Yeah,took me a couple of goes to get the wording right to winkle the results out. Apparently, the scrapies aren't overly concerned about exact naming, which does make searching trickier.
Yep! That's my direction of travel so that's where I want to be looking. I'm still going to look side to side to make sure the traffic has stopped. What ends up happening, especially when it's busy, is that the person who pressed the button stays standing next to it so you can't see when it's clear.
I lived next to the most dangerous puffin crossing in the UK (Whitley, Coventry). This statistic seemed unbelievable at first because the crossing doesn't look dangerous but over the years I came to believe it. I personally witnessed the aftermath of four accidents and was curious about their origin. The way local people used the crossing was to walk up, press the button and walk across, often without looking at the road. There was a time delay of about a minute and as such the crossing was usually empty by the time the light was red and the cars were waiting for nobody.
There is a newly installed on in my town. You don't have to push the button. It detects a person in there and engaged the button automatically.
Also these things have a spinning cone at the bottom. This is for guide dogs. They're trained to recognise the spinning cone so they know when to cross the road.