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and Thresholds for Virginia Freeways.

Filetype[PDF-866.66 KB]


English

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  • Abstract:
    "The Federal Highway Administration has been encouraging states to improve their monitoring and tracking of the

    mobility impacts of work zones. The use of mobility performance measures will enable agencies to assess better the

    contribution of work zones to network congestion; to identify specific projects that are in need of remedial action; and

    potentially to assess penalties to contractors creating excessive, avoidable negative impacts. Although the Virginia Department

    of Transportation (VDOT) has defined allowable lane closure hours for the interstate system, VDOT has not defined specific

    performance measures and thresholds for what constitutes “unacceptable” work zone mobility impacts. Performance measures

    and thresholds have been developed by a number of other states, so there is a need to determine whether these could be adapted

    for use by VDOT.

    This study explored issues related to a potential work zone mobility performance measurement program for Virginia.

    The issues investigated included identification of potential performance measures, definition of performance thresholds, and

    recommendations for data sources for performance measurement calculations. This information was synthesized from

    information regarding the experiences of selected states and experiences from a series of case studies that used data from

    Virginia work zones. The review of experiences in selected other states found that delay and queue length were the performance

    measures used most often by the states studied. The Virginia case studies focused on the use of private sector data to generate

    mobility performance measures and found that the level of spatial aggregation in rural areas could inhibit the ability to generate

    accurate performance measures, although granularity was better on urban roads. The level of temporal aggregation was also

    found to influence performance measures.

    The research identified a number of key issues that VDOT should consider as a work zone mobility performance

    measures program is developed. The report recommends that VDOT develop a pilot program that focuses on urban interstates

    initially and convene a task group to develop formal policies and procedures for use in the state."

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