Work Zone Mobility and Safety Program

Appendix C: Exercises

The data used in these exercises are fictitious and are for demonstration purposes only.

Module 3—Exercise

Project Coordination

A transportation agency is planning several road projects. These projects include significant infrastructure improvements in close proximity (within 1 square mile) to each other. The projects were designed at different times, as noted below, but lack of funding delayed construction. The DOT now has programmed funding to undertake all projects in fall 2013.

The main corridor is a 6-lane arterial with an ADT of 65,000 vehicles; approximately 60% is commuter traffic.

Map of the area around the intersections of New York Avenue, Florida Avenue, and North Capitol Street in Washington, D.C., with road projects A,B, C, D, and E marked.

The projects (see figure above) in the vicinity include (design dates in parenthesis):

  • Project A (2010): Resurface/Rehabilitate Brentwood Road
  • Project B (2010): Replace Bridge over New York Avenue
  • Project C (2008): Reconstruct the New York Avenue including bridge (C1)
  • Project D (2008): Traffic Safety Improvement Project at intersection
  • Project E (2006): Reconstruction of 1st Street

Questions

  1. As the Project Engineer for one of the five construction projects, identify some key issues that could arise if all projects start together, as planned for fall 2013?
  2. What are some possible ways to handle coordination?

Module 4—Exercise

Corridor Rehabilitation

A transportation agency is planning to rehabilitate an approximately 0.81-mile section (southbound only) of the I-5 Freeway from W. Delta Park to N. Lombard Street (see figure below). I-5 is a designated north - south major freight route, within the Functional Classification of Urban Principal Arterial – Interstate. I-5 currently has three northbound travel lanes and two southbound travel lanes through the project area. This section of Pacific Highway (I-5) is access controlled and has local street/highway access only through the freeway on-off ramp system.

The two-lane southbound section creates a traffic bottleneck that results in congestion and safety problems. This section of I-5 also has substandard shoulders, medians, and acceleration lanes. The proposed improvements (southbound only) would provide a three-lane section for southbound direction with standard shoulders, median, and acceleration lanes. Traffic volumes along the I-5 corridor in the vicinity of the project are over capacity with 55,000 ADT per day in the southbound direction. Heavy vehicles account for 7% of the traffic.

Map of the area around I-5 (Pacific Highway) in Portland, Oregon, showing a construction area on the part of I-5 between West Delta Park and North Lombard Street.

Questions

  1. What are work zone traffic control alternatives that you would consider for the project?
  2. What are some of the factors to be considered while choosing the alternative?
  3. Do you have enough data to make a decision about a traffic control alternative? If not, what other data would you need?

Module 5—Exercise

Bridge Replacement

The 11th Street Bridges are a pair of one-way bridges across the Anacostia River in a major urban area. The bridges currently provide a connection from the Anacostia Freeway (I-295/DC-295) to the Southeast/Southwest Freeway (I-695/I-395); however, there is no direct connection between the Southeast Freeway and the northern segment of the Anacostia Freeway (see figure below). Because of this unfinished connection, regional commuting traffic from surrounding jurisdictions is forced to use neighborhood streets to reach the Anacostia Freeway to and from the Southeast Freeway. This causes significantly increased traffic on local streets.

The 11th Street Bridge reconstruction project is a Design-Build Project intended to replace this aging pair of Anacostia River bridges and to construct the missing connection The project will also add a third bridge dedicated to local traffic, which will accommodate bicyclists and pedestrians along with streetcar tracks for improved transit accommodations. It is anticipated that during any one day of the construction as many as 10-15 different lane closures will be operational within the construction limits.

Map of the area around the 11th Street Bridges project in Washington, D.C.

Questions

  1. Identify some of the public relations issues that the D/B contractor will need to address during design and construction. What are some TMP strategies that could be used for public outreach?
  2. Cite some of the operational issues the contractor will need to address during lane closures. What strategies may be useful to address these operational issues?

Module 6—Exercise

A transportation agency is reconstructing a major bridge at mile marker 104 on I-95. I-95 runs north-south and has three lanes in each direction at this location. While some work will be completed outside of existing roadway limits with no impact to road users, other portions of the work will require temporary restrictions of traffic, including lane closures, shoulder closures, and lane shifts. During the morning peak condition (6:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.) the average hourly lane volume is 1300 vph for the southbound direction. The off peak hourly volume is 400 vph. There is no p.m. peak in the southbound direction. In the northbound direction the evening peak period is 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. with an average hourly lane volume of 1450 vph. The northbound off peak hourly volume is 400 vph. The construction is expected to be completed in 18 months.

Traffic impact assessment was conducted based on the following constraints:

  1. All lanes shall be kept open during the peak hour by direction
  2. At all other times at least two lanes must be kept open
  3. Lane closures are limited to 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. to 6:30 a.m., Monday through Friday.
  4. If the queue length extends 2.5 miles beyond the work zone or the travel time exceeds 30 minutes, contractor operations shall be adjusted to open all lanes until either the queue length reduces to 1.0 mile or the travel time to 10 minutes.

Based on this analysis, appropriate strategies (TTC, TO, and PI&O) were selected to mitigate the impacts. The construction activities are being done in accordance with contract requirements and the approved TMP is being implemented.

Questions

  1. Why is it important to monitor the TMP when this project is under construction?
  2. If the contact or proposes to accelerate the construction schedule via additional lane closures and/or extension of lane closure hours:
    1. How might this affect the TMP?
    2. Who should be involved in reviewing and approving the changes?

General Exercise

A transportation agency is planning several projects in a heavily developed urban area; one scenario is presented here for discussion. As part of the project, the agency is reconstructing the bridge over New York Avenue. New York Avenue is a major principal arterial with three lanes in each direction, and is a designated emergency route. The transportation agency has determined that this is a significant project with major anticipated impacts.

Construction Conditions New York Avenue:

  • Average weekday volume—65,000 vpd (a.m. split 75/25).
  • Posted speed limit—35 mph.
  • Truck Percentage—6%.
  • Average weekday volume on (ramp)—52,000 vpd (split 75/25).
  • 2 southwest bound New York Avenue lanes in a.m. peak hour (7:00–10:00 a.m.) (12-ft lanes).
  • 3 northeast bound New York Avenue lanes in p.m. peak (3:30–6:30 p.m. (9-ft lanes).
  • Close Ramp from SB 9th Street ramp to SWB New York Avenue.
  • Implement Detour Plan—Traffic to continue on Brentwood Parkway and make a right on Penn Street to get to New York Avenue.

The agency used Synchro to analyze the existing conditions and the proposed construction conditions presented here. Following table summarizes the results.

Intersection
(Cross Street, signalized)
New York Ave. (SWB a.m.) New York Ave. (NEB p.m.)
Existing/Baseline Construction Existing/Baseline Construction
Queue (ft) LOS Queue (ft) LOS Queue (ft) LOS Queue (ft) LOS
Florida Avenue 1243 E 2190 F 450 C 400 D
Penn Street 167 C 631 F 125 C 225 D
Fairview Avenue 150 C 550 F 115 C 125 D
Bladensburg Road 1166 E 2005 F 350 C 425 D
Notes: SWB—Southwest bound; NEB—Northeast bound

Corridor Extent
New York Avenue from Bladensburg Road to Florida Avenue
New York Ave. (a.m. peak)
SWB NEB
Travel time (min)
Baseline 18.5 7.5
Construction 38.0 9.2

A map of the construction area (figure 1) is shown below.

Construction area map of an area around New York Avenue NE in Washington, D.C., showing a detour onto Brentwood Parkway NE and Penn Street NE. Major intersections shown are New York Avenue with Florida Avenue, Penn Street, Fairview Avenue, and Bladensburg Road.
Figure 1: Construction Area Map

Questions

  1. The construction scenario presented above is estimated to have significant delays during the morning peak (SWB). What are possible strategies to implement to manage the impacts?
  2. A major crash occurs on New York Avenue SWB at 6:00 a.m. (see figure 2 below). All SWB lanes are closed and not expected to reopen until 9:00 a.m. What are possible strategies that need to be in place to manage the impacts?

Diagram of a crash site on part of New York Avenue in Washington, D.C., showing the crash in the two southwest bound lanes and the end of a work zone in the three northeast bound lanes opposite the crash site.
Figure 2: Crash Location

A sample work zone management strategies checklist is provided below.

Work Zone Management Strategies Tool Box

1. Temporary Traffic Control


1.1 Control Strategies Checkmark
Construction phasing/staging  
Full roadway closures  
Lane shifts or closures  
One-lane, two-way controlled operation  
Two-way, one-lane traffic/Reversible lanes  
Ramp closures/relocation  
Freeway-to-freeway interchange closures  
Night work  
Weekend work  
Work hour restrictions for peak travel  
Pedestrian/Bicyclist access improvements  
Business access improvements  
Off-site detours/use of alternate routes  

1.2 Traffic Control Devices Checkmark
Temporary signs  
Portable changeable message signs (PCMS)  
Arrow boards  
Channelizing devices  
Temporary pavement markings  
Flaggers and uniformed traffic control officers  
Temporary traffic signals  
Lighting devices  

1.3 Project Coordination Strategies Checkmark
Other area projects  
Utilities  
Right-of-Way  
Other transportation infrastructure  

1.4 Innovative Contracting Strategies Checkmark
Design-build  
ALB Bidding  
Incentive/Disincentive clauses  
Lane rental  
Performance specifications  

1.5 Innovative or Accelerated Construction Techniques Checkmark
Prefabricated/recast elements  
Rapid cure materials  

2. Transportation Operations


2.1 Demand Management Strategies Checkmark
Transit service improvements  
Transit incentives  
Shuttle services  
Parking supply management  
Variable work hours  
Telecommuting  
Ridesharing/carpooling incentives  
Park-and-Ride promotion  

2.2 Corridor/Network Management Strategies Checkmark
Signal timing/coordination improvements  
Temporary traffic signals  
Street/intersection improvements  
Bus turnouts  
Turn restrictions  
Parking restrictions  
Truck/heavy vehicle restrictions  
Reversible lanes  
Dynamic lane closure system  
Ramp closures  
Railroad crossing controls  
Coordination with adjacent construction site(s)  

2.3 Work Zone ITS Strategies Checkmark
Late lane merge  
PCMS with speed display  
Travel time estimation system  
Advanced speed information system  
Advanced congestion warning system  
Conflict warning system (e.g., construction vehicles entering roadway)  
Travel time monitor system  
Freeway queue monitor system  
CCTV monitoring  
Real-time detour  

2.4 Work Zone Safety Management Strategies Checkmark
Speed limit reduction/variable speed limits  
Temporary traffic signals  
Temporary traffic barrier  
Movable traffic barrier systems  
Crash-cushions  
Temporary rumble strips  
Intrusion alarms  
Warning lights  
Automated flagger assistance devices (AFADs)  
Project task force/committee  
Construction safety supervisors/inspectors  
Road safety audits  
TMP monitor/inspection team  

2.5 Incident Management (ICM) and Enforcement Strategies Checkmark
ITS for traffic monitoring/management  
TMC  
Surveillance (e.g., CCTV)  
Helicopter for aerial surveillance  
Traffic Screens  
Call boxes  
Mile-post markers  
Tow/freeway service patrol  
Total station units  
Photogrammetry  
Media coordination  
Local detour routes  
Contract support for ICM  
Incident/Emergency management coordination  
Incident/Emergency response plan  
Dedicated (paid) police enforcement  
Cooperative police enforcement  
Automated enforcement  
Increased penalties for work zone violations  
Emergency pull-offs  

3. Public Information and Outreach


3.1 Public Awareness Strategies Checkmark
Branding  
Press kits  
Brochures and mailers  
Press releases/media alerts  
Mass media (earned and/or paid)  
Paid advertisements  
Project information center  
Telephone hotline  
Planned lane closure website  
Project website  
Public meetings/hearings, workshops  
Community task forces  
Coordination with media/schools/business/FEMS  
Work zone education and safety campaigns  
Rideshare promotions  
Visual information  

3.2 Motorist Information Strategies Checkmark
Radio traffic news  
Changeable message signs  
Temporary motorist information signs  
Dynamic speed message sign  
Highway Advisory Radio (HAR)  
Extinguishable signs  
Highway information network (web-based)  
Traveler information systems (wireless, handheld)  
Transportation Management Center (TMC)  
Live traffic camera(s) on a website  
Project information hotline  
Email alerts  

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