Effects of Bridge Surface and Pavement Maintenance Activities on Asset Rating


Book Description

Treatment effectiveness modeling is essential for asset performance modeling and predictions, and ultimately, for effective performance monitoring and feedback and for evaluating and comparing alternative treatments. Asset managers use these models to determine the expected incremental change of asset condition resulting from a future application of a specific maintenance treatment. That way, the agency can update its asset performance curves in software simulation to reflect maintenance application at any future year and to identify the most cost-effective treatments. Asset managers also seek to identify the factors that influence treatment effectiveness, and to use cost and performance data to estimate the cost-effectiveness of these treatments. This study provides and demonstrates a methodology to quantify the impact of INDOT's standard maintenance treatments on state highway pavements and bridge deck surfaces, in terms of their condition ratings. Of the specific objectives, the first is to generate requisite reset values that INDOT's asset manager can use in the agency's PMS and BMS software packages. The second is to measure the longer-term effectiveness of specific maintenance treatments in terms of the extension to asset life. The third specific objective is to use this information to assess the cost-effectiveness of the treatments.The research product from this project is a set of averages or models that represent the impacts (performance jump, post-treatment performance vs. age relationship, and cost) of each treatment type typically applied to INDOT's assets. The first deliverable from this project is the average (mean) impact for each treatment type under investigation. The second is the overall statistical description of the impact, namely, the minimum and maximum impact, and range and standard deviation of impact; a statistical model that predicts the impact as a function of asset and treatment attributes. The third is a set of charts that describe the sensitivity of the treatment impact to factors related to the asset or the treatment. The study also developed cost models for each of the pavement and bridge treatments and used these results to assess the long-term cost-effectiveness of the treatments.




Bridge Preservation Guide


Book Description

This guide provides bridge related definitions and corresponding commentaries, as well as the framework for a systematic approach to a preventive maintenance program. The goal is to provide guidance on bridge preservation. This guide is intended for Federal, State, and local bridge engineers, area engineers, bridge owners, and bridge preservation practitioners.




Effects of Surface Treatments on National Bridge Inventory Condition Ratings for Concrete Bridge Decks in Utah


Book Description

Although the application of surface treatments on bridge decks is expected to positively impact bridge deck condition, the effectiveness of specific surface treatments on extending bridge deck life has not yet been quantified on Utah bridge decks. Therefore, the objectives of this research were to develop and analyze deterioration curves for bare concrete bridge decks and decks with specific treatments commonly used in Utah. The scope of this study was determined by the types and extent of electronically available data, including selected static inventory information; maintenance, rehabilitation, and reconstruction histories; and National Bridge Inventory (NBI) condition ratings for the bridge decks.




AASHTO Transportation Asset Management Guide


Book Description

Aims to encourage transportation agencies to address strategic questions as they confront the task of managing the surface transportation system. Drawn form both national and international knowledge and experience, it provides guidance to State Department of Transportation (DOT) decision makers, as well as county and municipal transportation agencies, to assist them in realizing the most from financial resources now and into the future, preserving highway assets, and providing the service expected by customers. Divided into two parts, Part one focuses on leadership and goal and objective setintg, while Part two is more technically oriented. Appendices include work sheets and case studies.




Significant Findings from Full-scale Accelerated Pavement Testing


Book Description

"TRB's National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 433: Significant Findings from Full-Scale Accelerated Pavement Testing documents and summarizes significant findings from the various experimental activities associated with full-scale accelerated pavement testing (f-sAPT) programs that have taken place between 2000 and 2011. The report also identifies gaps in knowledge related to f-sAPT and where future research may be needed. NCHRP Synthesis 433 is designed to expand the f-sAPT base of knowledge documented in NCHRP Syntheses 325 and 235, both with the same title of Significant Findings from Full-Scale Accelerated Pavement Testing. f-sAPT is the controlled application of a wheel loading, at or above the appropriate legal load limit, to a pavement system to determine pavement response in a compressed time period. The acceleration of damage is achieved by one or more of the following factors: increased repetitions, modified loading conditions, imposed climatic conditions, and thinner pavements with a decreased structural capacity which have shorter design lives"--







Evaluation of High Performance Pavement and Bridge Deck Wearing Surface Repair Materials


Book Description

This project provided for a laboratory and field testing of several high performance repair materials for pavements and concrete bridge decks. The main purpose was to provide ODOT with materials and procedures to shorten road and bridge closures. The project was relatively complex with several phases. First, the repair materials for testing and the locations needed to be selected. This required a thorough review of the available literature, including the practices used by other state transportation agencies. Next, the repair materials were installed on pavements and bridge decks on three separate installation projects in ODOT District 8, two by the Great Lakes Construction Company (TGLCC), and two with ODOT maintenance crews. There was a cold weather installation on bridge decks and concrete pavements in March 2014, with two products rated for low temperatures, followed by a larger installation on concrete pavement with four other products in June 2014. The first two installations were carried out by TGLCC. These installations were monitored for two years from the first installation. In June 2015, five bridge deck patches with two materials were installed by the ODOT maintenance crews. In addition, a parallel laboratory testing program of the selected materials was carried out to evaluate performance and engineering properties. Finally, the specification recommendations were developed based on the literature review and project results. The phases of the project are documented in five separate graduate theses published at Cleveland State University







Climate Change, Energy, Sustainability and Pavements


Book Description

Climate change, energy production and consumption, and the need to improve the sustainability of all aspects of human activity are key inter-related issues for which solutions must be found and implemented quickly and efficiently. To be successfully implemented, solutions must recognize the rapidly changing socio-techno-political environment and multi-dimensional constraints presented by today’s interconnected world. As part of this global effort, considerations of climate change impacts, energy demands, and incorporation of sustainability concepts have increasing importance in the design, construction, and maintenance of highway and airport pavement systems. To prepare the human capacity to develop and implement these solutions, many educators, policy-makers and practitioners have stressed the paramount importance of formally incorporating sustainability concepts in the civil engineering curriculum to educate and train future civil engineers well-equipped to address our current and future sustainability challenges. This book will prove a valuable resource in the hands of researchers, educators and future engineering leaders, most of whom will be working in multidisciplinary environments to address a host of next-generation sustainable transportation infrastructure challenges. "This book proposes a broad detailed overview of the actual scientific knowledge about pavements linked to climate change, energy and sustainability at the international level in an original multidimensional/multi-effects way. By the end, the reader will be aware of the whole global issues to care about for various pavement technical features around the world, among which the implications of modelling including data collection, challenging resources saving and infrastructures services optimisation. This is a complete and varied work, rare in the domain." Dr. Agnes Jullien Research Director Director of Environmental, Development, Safety and Eco-Design Laboratory (EASE) Department of Development, Mobility and Environment Ifsttar Centre de Nantes Cedex- France “An excellent compilation of latest developments in the field of sustainable pavements. The chapter topics have been carefully chosen and are very well-organized with the intention of equipping the reader with the state-of-the-art knowledge on all aspects of pavement sustainability. Topics covered include pavement Life Cycle Analysis (LCA), pervious pavements, cool pavements, photocatalytic pavements, energy harvesting pavements, etc. which will all be of significant interest to students, researchers, and practitioners of pavement engineering. This book will no doubt serve as an excellent reference on the topic of sustainable pavements.” Dr. Wei-Hsing Huang Editor-in-Chief of International Journal of Pavement Research and Technology (IJPRT) and Professor of Civil Engineering National Central University Taiwan




Potential Impacts of Climate Change on U.S. Transportation


Book Description

The Transportation Research Board (TRB) and the Division on Earth and Life Studies (DELS) have released the pre-publication version of TRB Special Report 290, The Potential Impacts of Climate Change on U.S. Transportation, which explores the consequences of climate change for U.S. transportation infrastructure and operations. The report provides an overview of the scientific consensus on the current and future climate changes of particular relevance to U.S. transportation, including the limits of present scientific understanding as to their precise timing, magnitude, and geographic location; identifies potential impacts on U.S. transportation and adaptation options; and offers recommendations for both research and actions that can be taken to prepare for climate change. The book also summarizes previous work on strategies for reducing transportation-related emissions of carbon dioxide--the primary greenhouse gas--that contribute to climate change. Five commissioned papers used by the committee to help develop the report, a summary of the report, and a National Academies press release associated with the report are available online. DELS, like TRB, is a division of the National Academies, which include the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research Council.