Highway Impact Assessment: Techniques and Procedures for Transportation Planners and Managers
By (Author) Denver Tolliver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
7th December 1993
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
388.10973
Hardback
232
Railroad branch-line abandonment, grain subterminals, and major changes in rural land use and transportation patterns are generating heavy truck traffic on low-volume collector and arterial highways. Unfortunately, these changes are occurring at a time when America's highway network is under-funded and deteriorating. Tolliver presents an integrated set of methods for projecting the effects of rail-line abandonment and rural land-use changes on future highway costs. His book aims to be analytical and practical, and to provide insights into the complex forces that generate truck traffic and lead to the deterioration of pavements. The text contains many formulas, techniques and models. The book focuses on freight transportation demand and the modelling of heavy truck traffic flows. Through the use of theoretical and applied concepts in transportation demand, mathematical programming and network analysis, a set of procedures for modelling heavy truck traffic is formulated. Then, using life-cycle pavement concepts, a methodology for forecasting the financial effects of incremental heavy truck traffic is constructed. The impact assessment techniques are illustrated through the use of two real-world examples: (1) the location of a large grain subterminal elevator and (2) the abandonment of a railroad mainline. In each case, the concepts of freight demand forecasting, truck traffic simulation, and pavement deterioration analysis are applied to actual data and events.
DENVER TOLLIVER is a research scientist at the Upper Great Plains Transportation Institute at North Dakota State University. A former railroad planner for the North Dakota Department of Transportation, he has consulted for transportation agencies in Nebraska, Oregon, and Washington state. He has published articles in such journals as The Logistics and Transportation Review, Journal of the Transportation Research Forum, and Transportation Law Journal.