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- Title
Establishing highway horizontal alignment to maximize design consistency.
- Authors
Easa, Said M.; Mehmood, Atif
- Abstract
Highway design consistency is one of the important criteria in selecting the geometric features of proposed or existing alignments of two-lane rural highways. Operating-speed (OS) profile models have been used to evaluate design consistency by trial and error. For a proposed new highway, however, there may be geometric and physical constraints, and selection of these elements by trial and error to achieve optimal design consistency would be difficult, if not impossible. This paper presents an optimization model that establishes highway horizontal alignment to achieve maximum design consistency based on the OS profile. The decision variables of the model include radius of horizontal curves, spiral curve lengths, length of speed-change (SC) segments, and acceleration and deceleration rates. The objective function of the model minimizes the mean OS difference or the maximum OS difference for successive geometric features along the highway section. Application examples and sensitivity analysis are presented to illustrate the capabilities of the model in evaluating improvement strategies and to ensure that the model produces sound optimum alignments. The proposed model, which complements existing optimization models that mainly address highway construction cost, should be of interest to highway practitioners and engineers.
- Subjects
ROAD construction; HEAVY construction; TRANSPORTATION; ACCELERATION (Mechanics); CONSTRUCTION contracts; CONSTRUCTION costs; MATHEMATICAL optimization
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering, 2007, Vol 34, Issue 9, p1159
- ISSN
0315-1468
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/L07-043