Lecture 12 Introduction Ppt
Lecture 12 Introduction Ppt
Code : CT 231
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Reading
• Traffic and Highway Engineering, FOURTH EDITION,
Nicholas J. Garber Lester A. Hoel
References
• Geometric Design and Structural Design of highways,
Staff of Highway and Traffic Engineering, Cairo University
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Lecture # 1
INTRODUCTION
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Introduction
• Highway Characteristics
There are two primary categories of service provided by
highways and highway systems:
▫ Accessibility
▫ Mobility
“ Accessibility” refers to the direct connection to land uses provided by highways
This accessibility comes in the form of curb parking, driveway access to
off-street parking, bus stops, taxi stands, loading zones, driveway access to
loading areas, and similar features.
“Mobility” refers to the through movement of people, goods, and vehicles from
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Point A to Point B in the system.
Before
Chattanooga, TN
After
Mobility or Access?
Why?
Chattanooga, TN
What can we Do?
Highway System Components
1. Vehicle
2. Driver (and peds./bikes)
3. Roadway
4. Consider characteristics, capabilities,
and interrelationships in design
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Factors Influencing Highway Design
Highway design is based on specified design standards and
controls which depend on the following roadway system
factors:
• Functional classification
• Design hourly traffic volume and vehicle mix
• Design speed
• Design vehicle
• Cross section of the highway, such as lanes, shoulders, and
medians
• Presence of heavy vehicles on steep grades
• Topography of the area that the highway traverses
• Level of service
• Available funds
• Safety
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• Social and environmental factors
Highway Classification
A- According to Location
- Urban Roads
• Limited-access facilities (Expressways)
• Arterials
• Collectors (Major or Minor)
• Local streets
- Rural highways
• Freeways
• 1st Class
• 2nd Class
• Local
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Hierarchy of Highway Classifications
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Highway Classification
B- According to Cross section
-Multilane Divided
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Typical Cross Section for Two-Lane Highways
- Divided highways,
- Main roads, and
- Regional roads
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Factors Considered in the Location Process
• Topography and geology
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Factors Considered in the Location Process
• Directness of route
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Factors Considered in the Location Process
• Environmental
-Animal habitat
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Factors Considered in the Location Process
• Economic
Construction
Maintenance costs
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Location Steps
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Daily Volume
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Daily Volume
year.
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Daily Volume
year.
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Daily Volume
• AADT Applications
▫ Estimation of highway use
▫ Estimation of trends
▫ Economic feasibility evaluation
▫ Planning
▫ Maintenance
• ADT Applications
▫ Planning
▫ Measurement of current demand
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Hourly Volume
• Volume varies considerably over the 24 hours of the day,
• Rush Hours
• Peak Hour
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Design Volume
Usually hourly volume
Which hour?
Average hourly volume – inadequate design
Maximum peak hour – not economical
Hourly volume used for design should not be exceeded
very often or by very much
Usually use 30th highest hourly volume of the year
On rural roads 30 HHV is ~ 15% of ADT
Tends to be constant year to year 29
Design
• In design, peak-hour volumes are sometimes
estimated from projections of the AADT. (?)
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DDHV
• 30th peak hour of the year
▫ (K represent it)
• D and K would decrease by increasing development
density (?)
• K and D should be monitored regularly.
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Relationship between Peak Hour and Annual
Average Daily Traffic on Rural Highways
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Design Speed in Green Book
(suggested minimum design speed)
Urban
Locals 20-30 mph
Collectors 30 mph+
Arterials 30-60 mph
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Capacity Analysis
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Objectives
Review LOS definition and determinants
Define capacity and relate to “ideal” capacities
Review calculating capacity using HCM
procedures for basic freeway section
Focus on relations between capacity, level-of-
service, and design
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Level of Service (LOS)
• Concept – a qualitative measure describing
operational conditions within a traffic stream and
their perception by drivers and/or passengers
• Levels represent range of operating conditions
defined by measures of effectiveness (MOE)
• How can be described:
-Freedom on choice own speed
-Freedom on choice maneuvers
-Density
• How to measured:
- Running speed
- Volume capacity ratio (v/c)
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Level-of-Service Characteristics
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Capacity – Defined
Capacity: Maximum hourly rate of vehicles or persons
that can reasonably be expected to pass a point, or
traverse a uniform section of lane or roadway, during a
specified time period under prevailing conditions (traffic
and roadway)
Different for different facilities (freeway, multilane, 2-lane
rural, signals)
Why would it be different?
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Ideal Capacity
• Freeways: Capacity • Multilane Suburban/Rural
(Free-Flow Speed) 2,200 pcphpl (60 mph)
2,400 pcphpl (70 mph) 2,100 (55 mph)
2,350 pcphpl (65 mph) 2,000 (50 mph)
2,300 pcphpl (60 mph) 1,900 (45 mph)
2,250 pcphpl (55 mph)
• 2-lane rural – 2,800 pcph
• Signal – 1,900 pcphgpl
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Ideal Capacity
Assumptions (Ideal Conditions, all other conditions
reduce capacity):
• Only passenger cars
• No direct access points
• A divided highway
• FFS > 60 mph
• Represents highest level of multilane rural and suburban
highways
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Multilane Highways
Intended for analysis of uninterrupted-flow highway
segments
• Signal spacing > 2.0 miles
• No on-street parking
• No significant bus stops
• No significant pedestrian activities
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Source: HCM, 2000
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Step 1: Gather data
Step 2: Calculate capacity
(Supply)
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Source: HCM, 2000
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Source: HCM, 2000
Factors affecting capacity
A-Road Factors
1-No. of Lanes and Lane width
2-Shoulder width
3-Horizontial and vertical alignments (Terrain )
4-Lateral clearance
5-Pavement surface condition
B-Traffic Factors
1-Truck percent
2-Traffic speed
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Cross Section Elements
1. Surface Type:
- Asphalt concrete (flexible pavement).
- Plan, simply reinforced & continuously reinforced concrete
(rigid pavement).
- Surface treatment for shoulders.
3. Lane Width:
- Standard = 3.65m
- In practice = 3.75 m
- +0.25m (at shoulders) & +0.5m (at median if barrier curb is
found).
Where +0.25m & 0.50m marginal strips.
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Cross Section Elements
4. Shoulder: - Surface treatment
Width = 2.5 - 3.0m
Cross-slop = 5 - 8% = 0.05 - 0.08
5. Curbs:
- Barrier (for pedestrian) ((ال يمكن اجتيازه بالجراجات
- Mountable ((يمكن اجتيازه بالجراجات
- Curb & Gutter ((أنواع من األرصفة تحوي نظام تصريف
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Cross Section Elements
6. Guard rail (by sheet and column):
Used at hazardous points:
- at high fill > 3.0m
- steep grades ((انحدار شديد
- sharp curvature ((انحناء شديد
- sudden change in alignment
- restricted sight (foggy (مناطق الرؤية المقيدة) (ضبابي
- near rivers and lakes < 10 - 15m
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Cross Section Elements
7. Median:
For:
- Separating opposite flow
- Future expansion
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Cross Section Elements
8. Side walk :((طريق المشاة
9. Side slop:
a. Cut slop:
- For normal soil (clay, silt, sand), & h ≤ 6.0m:
H:V = 2:1, … ..., 4:1 (favorable 4:1 (المفضلة
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Cross Section Elements
- For normal soil, & h > 6.0m:
(has to be design according to slop stability theory)
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Cross Section Elements
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Cross Section Elements
10. Vertical clearance:
For roads = min. 5.50m
For railway = min. 6.50m
For walkway = min. 2.50m
For main rivers = min. 6.50m
For other rivers = min. 3.50m
For high tension lines = min. 8.8 -10m
11. Right of way ( < (حرم الطريق80m
Freeway ≈ 200m
Highway ≈ 100m
Used for: future expansion ((التوسع, safety ( (األمان,
maintenance .((الصيانة
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