Culvert Management Systems: Alabama, Maryland, Minnesota, and Shelby County | Research Report
Asset ManagementThis case study details the implementation of a culvert management system (CMS) in three States and one local agency, in order to encourage and facilitate the inclusion of frequently overlooked highway features in TAM. The report is part of the FHWA Office of Asset Management's series of case studies on TAM, produced with the goal of sharing information between agencies to improve efficiency.
Service Life of Pavements: Context, Review and Definition of Terms | Research Report
Asset Management, PavementThis project provides information about the concept of remaining service life (RSL), and defines key terms that are closely related to RSL in order to facilitate the use of RSL estimation for maintenance planning.
Process for Setting Intervention Criteria and Allocating Budgets: Literature Review | Research Report
Asset Management, PavementA literature review of Austroads project AT1042 Process for Setting Intervention Criteria and Allocating Budgets. The report outlines techniques to facilitate decision-making at road agencies and reviews the effectiveness of several prioritization strategies.
A Community Consultation Process and Methods for Quantifying Community Expectations on Levels of Service for Road Networks | Research Report
Asset Management, PavementA research report published by Austroads in 2006 that focuses on the process by which community input and expectations can be assessed, in order to optimize road network maintenance programming.
Optimal Investment Decision-Making for Highway Transportation Asset Management Under Risk and Uncertainty | Document
Asset Management, PavementEfficient highway investment decision-making becomes increasingly important in transportation. In order to facilitate such a decision process, first issue is to estimate benefits of highway projects and utilize those values for project selection to yield optimal investment decisions. The existing methodologies for highway project evaluation are limited to probabilistic risk assessments of input factors such as construction, rehabilitation, and maintenance costs, travel demand, and discount rates that are inherited with risks. This research introduces a new approach for highway project evaluation extended from Shackle’s model to explicitly address cases where those factors are under uncertainty with no definable probability distributions. Then, a generalized methodology for highway project evaluation with input factors under certainty, risk, and uncertainty is established. If an input factor is under certainty, its single value is directly used. If an input factor is under risk, the mathematical expectation of the factor based on probabilistic risk assessment can be determined. If an input factor is under uncertainty, a single-valued outcome of the factor can be estimated according to a preset decision rule in the extension of Shackle’s model. The values of input factors separately determined under certainty, risk, and uncertainty can be used to compute the overall benefits of a highway project in the physical asset’s one service life-cycle and in perpetuity horizon, respectively. The developed methodology offers flexibility for the decision-maker to consider any combination of input factors under certainty, risk or uncertainty and it could be applied to estimate the amount of benefits associated with sub-project benefit items (if a specific benefit item is further separable) under certainty, risk, or uncertainty in accordance with available information. For project selection, a stochastic optimization model is developed as the multi-choice multidimensional Knapsack problem with Ω-stage budget recourses. The model facilitates the selection of a subset of candidate highway projects across a multiyear period under budget uncertainty in order to achieve maximized overall project benefits. Contract-, corridor-, and deferment-based tradeoff methods are employed to assess the impacts of spatial and temporal restrictions on project selection results. An efficient solution algorithm with the computational complexity of O(N2) is developed for the proposed stochastic model. A case study using data on state highway programming in Indiana for period 1996-2006 is conducted to apply the methodology for project evaluation with input factors under certainty, risk, and uncertainty, and the stochastic model for project selection under budget uncertainty. Cross comparisons of project benefits estimated with and without uncertainty considerations are made. The overall benefits of projects selected using different tradeoff analysis methods in the stochastic model are compared. Furthermore, the respective project selection results are matched with the actual programming decisions and relatively high consistency rate is obtained. The new methodology and model can be adopted by state transportation agencies to improve the efficiency of highway investment decisions.
Publisher: Midwest Regional University Transportation Center, University of Wisconsin
Final Program: New Directions in Asset Management and Economic Analysis Conference | Presentation
Program for the 7th National Asset Management Conference -- New Directions in Asset Management and Economic Analysis. This conference program includes sessions on important emerging issues in transportation asset management. Among them will be organizational leadership, management systems, optimization, and training and education. The conference features three thematic tracks and four special topic areas. The following are the three thematic tracks: •Integration of Maintenance and Operations into Transportation Asset Management,•Putting Economics into Practice, and •Transportation Asset Management in the Ports and Harbors Community.
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Transportation for Tomorrow: Report of the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission | Document
This report discusses the surface transportation system in the United States. It argues that surface transportation is at a crossroads. Its bridges, highways and public transit systems are aging and deteriorating. Deaths from traffic accidents are continuing. Traffic congestion causes traffic delays in cities and rural areas alike. The country does not invest enough in all modes of transportation - including railroads, bus travel, water transportation, and automobile travel - to meet future demand. The nation's economic leadership in the world will not be forceful enough if freight transportation is not reliable or efficient. Transportation decisions are politically based, which can get in the way of effective decision making. The report discusses the investments necessary to make the nation's transportation system more effective and efficient, and thus keep the United States' role as a world leader. Transportation investments are crucial to highways, public transit, passenger railroads and freight railroads.
Publisher: National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission
U. S. Domestic Scan Program: Best Practices in Transportation Asset Management. SCAN-TOUR REPORT | Document
The purpose of this scan was to identify best case examples of the application of asset management principles and practice in U.S. transportation agencies. The scan was sponsored by American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), and the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP).
Publisher: The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, U.S. Dept. of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration
Arkansas Statewide Long-Range Intermodal Transportation Plan 2007 Update | Plan
The Arkansas Statewide Long-Range Intermodal Transportation Plan (2007 Long-Range Plan) is a policy guide document that describes the transportation systems in Arkansas. Conditions and needs of the transportation systems are also presented to ease identification of highway and transit improvement projects to be included in the Statewide Transportation Improvement Plan (STIP).
This is the third long-range plan approved by the Arkansas Highway Commission following the first plan approved in February 1995, and the second document in May 2002.
Challenges of Data for Performance Measures, A Workshop | Research Report
This circular discusses a workshop conducted by the Transportation Research Board. The goal of the workshop was to discuss data management practices. 15 agencies participated, and all of them answered a questionnaire about their data management, the results of which consist of the majority of the report. Using the accumulated data, the workshop focused on common issues that many agencies face, such as data quality and access, and breakout groups reported what they considered the number one issue in data management, and proposed solutions.
Strategies for a New Age: New York State's Transportation Master Plan for 2030 | Plan
SafetyAdopted in 2006, New York's long range plan updates their 1996 plan with their vision for transportation through 2030. The plan is aligned around five themes deemed important by the transportation users: mobility and reliability, safety, security, environmental sustainability, and economic competitiveness.This plan includes trends for demographics, economics, travel patterns and energy, and it presents them within the perspective of the future transportation system. The plan also describes the funding sources and needs from 2005 to 2030. Published before MAP-21 and the FAST Act, this long range plan does not have the distinct performance measures expected in modern plans.
NCHRP Synthesis 362 - Training Programs, Processes, Policies, and Practices | Research Report
This synthesis report addresses challenges and related to establishing and strengthening state DOT training, development, and education programs. The report presents a literature review and survey of 24 states, supplemented by interviews.