Cross Sections - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Cross Sections

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CE 453 Lecture 22 Iowa DOT Design Manual Chapter 3 Cross Sections – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cross Sections


1
Cross Sections
  • CE 453 Lecture 22

Iowa DOT Design Manual Chapter 3
2
See also Iowa DOT Standard Plans
3
Objectives
  • 1.     Identify cross section components and
    design criteria
  •  
  • See http//www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/flex/ch0
    6.htm (Chapter 6 from FHWAs Flexibility in
    Highway Design)

4
  • Cross Section Elements
  • Roadway
  • Median
  • Roadside
  • Roadway Components
  • Travel Lanes
  • Shoulders

Sourcehttp//www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/flex/ch
06.htm
5
  • Cross Section Elements
  • Roadway
  • Median
  • Border
  • Roadway Components
  • Travel Lanes
  • Auxiliary Lanes

Sourcehttp//www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/flex/ch
06.htm
6
Considerations for Design of Cross-Section
  • Volume and composition (percent trucks, buses,
    and recreational vehicles) of the vehicular
    traffic
  • likelihood of bicyclists and pedestrians using
    the route

Flexibility in Highway Design - Chapter 6
7
Considerations for Design of Cross-Section
  • Climatic conditions (storage space for plowed
    snow, amount of rain)
  • Presence of natural or human-made obstructions
    adjacent to the roadway (rock cliffs,etc)
  • Type and intensity of development along the
    facility
  • Safety of the users (speed of traffic)

8
Travel Lanes
  • Function guidance to drivers and vehicle
    support
  • Pavement types
  • high (modern standards),
  • intermediate (surface treatments), and
  • low (unpaved)

9
Travel Lanes
  • Selection Criteria
  • Traffic volume and composition
  • Soil characteristics
  • Past performance in area
  • Availability of materials
  • Energy conservation
  • Initial cost
  • Maintenance cost
  • Overall life-cycle cost

10
Cross Slope
  • Slope perpendicular to flow of traffic on tangent
    section
  • Rural normal crown uniform slope from center
    to edge of pavement (cross slope break typically
    at centerline)
  • Urban parabolic shape (gutter capacity)

11
Cross Slope
  • Rate of Cross Slope f(drainage, steering, and
    rollover or cross slope break)
  • Drivers cross the crown line during passing
    maneuvers
  • Difficult to negotiate steep slopes
  • AASHTO Recommends
  • High 1.5 to 2 (0.015 ft/ft m/m)
  • Intermediate 1.5 to 3
  • Low 2 to 6

12
(No Transcript)
13
Urban Cross-Sections
14
Urban Cross-Sections
15
HMA Cross-Sections
16
Drainage Considerations
17
Drainage Considerations
18
Roadway Component Travel Lane
  • Lane Width Considerations
  • What is the impact of weather on cross slope
    design?
  • Safety Allow steering adjustment and lateral
    clearance
  • Pavement edge crumbling (deterioration) less with
    wide lane
  • Cost/Benefit (depends on traffic)
  • Bicycle Use

19
Lane Width
  • Limited by physical dimension of vehicles
  • 12 ft desirable
  • 11 ft acceptable in urban areas with restrictions
  • 10 ft okay for low speed/urban roadways
  • 9 ft okay low volume rural and residential
    roadways
  • 14 ft shared outside lane with bike
  • TWLTL 10 16 ft (3.0 4.8m)
  • Auxiliary 10 ft. (3.0 m) or more

20
Shoulders
  • Functions
  • Lateral Support
  • Avoidance Space
  • Emergency Stop
  • Ped/Bike Use
  • Turning/Passing at Intersections
  • Mail Delivery, Buses, etc.

Flexibility in Highway Design - Chapter 6
21
Shoulders
  • Should be flush with roadway surface
  • Sloped to drain away from traveled way
  • Should be stable enough to support vehicles in
    all kinds of weather w/out rutting
  • Should be visibly different from traveled way

22
Shoulder geometry
  • Paved/Unpaved (earth, turf, gravel)
  • Graded and usable width depends on foreslope and
    rounding
  • Consider function, safety, and capacity impacts
  • Slope
  • 2 to 6 (paved)
  • 4 to 6 (gravel)
  • 8 (turf)
  • Min. 2 lane slope
  • Max crossover 8
  • Width 0.6 3.6 m (2 12 ft)

23
Source A Policy on Geometric Design of Highways
and Streets (The Green Book). Washington, DC.
American Association of State Highway and
Transportation Officials, 2001 4th Ed.
24
Curbs
  • Control access
  • Control drainage
  • Type used varies with location and design speed

25
Curbs
26
Curbs
27
Iowas Roadway-Related Fatal Crashes
  • 52 of Iowas fatalities are related to Lane
    Departure
  • 39 of Iowas fatal crashes are
    single-vehicleRun-Off-the-Road (ROR) crashes

28
Safety Investment Strategy
  • Candidate Safety Projects
  • Paved shoulders
  • Milled-in shoulder rumble strips
  • 2-lane shoulder widening
  • High severity crash intersections
  • High severity crash 2-lane roads
  • High crash curves
  • Expressway intersections
  • Centerline rumble strips
  • Cross-median head-on crashes

29
4 Foot Paved Shoulder
US 63
30
Milled Shoulder Rumble Strips
31
Median Function
  • Separate opposing traffic
  • Drainage
  • Aesthetics
  • Space for future lanes
  • Recovery
  • Access control
  • Minimize headlight glare

Flexibility in Highway Design - Chapter 6
32
Median Types/Geometry
  • Depressed (rural arterials, 61 preferred, 41
    min)
  • Raised (urban arterials)
  • Flush (urban/sub. some rural)
  • Double yellow to limit access
  • TWLTL
  • Width is determined by
  • Function
  • Safety
  • Need for independent design

Flexibility in Highway Design - Chapter 6
33
Iowa DOT Urban Design Aids
See http//www.dot.state.ia.us/local_systems
New Construction
34
Iowa DOT Urban 3R Guidelines
See http//www.dot.state.ia.us/local_systems
Resurfacing, Restoration, Rehabilitation
35
Rural Design - New Construction
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