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Urban Freeway Renewal
by David O. Cox
Frequently, highway officials are faced with a situation like this: An
old pavement on a heavily traveled route in the heart of an urban area
has served its useful life - and more. Over the years as traffic loadings
have doubled and then doubled again, the road has been patched, refurbished,
and overlaid. All in all, highway engineers are very pleased with its
performance, but this pavement has finally reached that inevitable point
where rehabilitation just won't work any more. This pavement must be replaced!
How can it be replaced in an efficient and cost-effective manner and with
as little disruption as possible to the economy and to the travel patterns
of the hundreds of thousands of people who depend on this route?
Sound familiar? It should because
as the Interstate Highway System begins to show its age, virtually every
large city in the United States has routes with pavements that match this
description. Many cities have used costly maintenance-intensive "fixes"
that do not fully resolve the problem and that force their citizens to
live a bit longer with substandard pavements.
The 1997 issue of Highway Statistics
presents the scope of this problem. In the United States, more than 34,000
kilometers of urban freeways are currently rated as being in need of replacement
now or in the very near future. This is approximately 28 percent of the
total length of urban freeways. Another 18,000 kilometers (15 percent)
are predicted to reach that condition by the year 2005. The cost of "system
preservation" in urban areas is already high and growing at a tremendous
rate - from just over 42 percent of the total highway construction dollars
spent in 1995 to nearly 50 percent in 1997. This means that together the
states and the federal government spent almost $12 billion last year just
to replace and repair some urban freeways, and still, the problem persists.
Situations like this are complex.
Within the overall context of the urban freeway pavement-reconstruction
problem, many specific concerns and problems must be addressed. These
include problems related to work-zone capacity, materials handling and
supply, the safety of both motorists and highway workers, very complicated
scheduling, and public relations. Furthermore, these projects can have
dramatic economic impacts and can disrupt the plans and schedules of hundreds
of thousands of people for the duration of the project.
Clearly, finding cost-effective
and customer-sensitive methods to reconstruct freeway pavements is an
important national issue. Just as clearly, the solution to this problem
will involve numerous highway disciplines and does not fit neatly into
our current, more compartmentalized methods of research and study.
Test Case - I-710 in Los
Angeles
In mid-1997, the Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), the Transportation Research Board (TRB), and the
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) formed a partnership
to determine the best way to replace an urban pavement. The partners agreed
to use Interstate 710 in Los Angeles as a test case. The partnership had
two basic goals: (1) find a solution for I-710 and, in the process, identify
the critical issues and provide a model for solving urban freeway problems,
and (2) pioneer a new way of doing business within the highway community.
Realizing that this mission
cuts across traditional lines of expertise, the partners assembled four
multidisciplinary teams with experts from throughout the country and representing
the entire highway industry. The typical team was made up of a chief engineer
from a state department of transportation (DOT), an FHWA division administrator,
a state DOT project engineer, a specialist from the asphalt- or concrete-paving
industry, a highway contractor, a pavement designer, a traffic engineer,
a maintenance engineer, and a member of the academic community. Two of
the teams were charged with producing an asphalt pavement design, and
the other two a concrete pavement design.
In addition, a team of public
relations specialists and a team of life-cycle cost analysts are in the
process of refining each of the recommended solutions.
I-710 in Los Angeles is an
excellent test case for this project. It is a 26-kilometer-long, eight-lane
freeway with concrete pavement built in the 1950s. It currently carries
more than 200,000 vehicles per day. As the primary access route to the
city of Long Beach and to the port of Los Angeles, I-710 is both a heavily
traveled truck route and a very important commuter route.
The teams first met in February at a three-day workshop held on the campus
of the University of California at Irvine. The workshop was divided into
three basic activities: a fact-finding phase, including a bus tour of
the project site and a public meeting; a brainstorming and analysis phase;
and a presentation phase. The teams were tasked to develop and propose
a project design that would:
- Provide a renewed pavement with a service
life of at least 40 years.
- Minimize agency life-cycle cost.
- Minimize short- and long-term user
cost.
- Minimize traffic disruption.
- Minimize community and environmental
effects.
- Provide for the safety of both highway
users and construction personnel.
Of these six criterion, the requirement for
a pavement with a service life of 40-plus years was perhaps the most unusual
because this is twice the design life of a typical pavement. The partners
felt that a major reconstruction project on such a heavily traveled route
should be a very rare event, and they wanted to be able to assure the
public that, in return for enduring the inconveniences and economic impacts
of reconstruction, they would not be inconvenienced to this extent again
for a very, very long time.
Although the workshop recommendations
are still being analyzed and refined by Caltrans (and FHWA), all four
teams designed a pavement with a structural life projected to exceed 40
years. It was acknowledged that both asphalt designs would need periodic
surface restoration during the 40-year period and that perhaps the concrete
designs would as well. In all cases, this was envisioned as a minimal
project to correct surface deviations and restore ride quality and/or
skid resistance. Such work could be done at a relatively low cost and
could be performed at night to minimize the effect on traffic.
Preliminary Designs
As shown in tables 1 and 2, the designs proposed by the individual teams
varied considerably among themselves and with the typical Caltrans design
for this type of project. Despite this variety and the innovative approach
taken by the teams, all of the proposed solutions have some surprising
similarities. All of the teams proposed:
- Replacing the pavement in all four
lanes in each direction as opposed to the Caltrans proposal to replace
only the two truck lanes in each direction.
- Recycling virtually 100 percent of
the old pavement back into the new project, thus eliminating the need
to remove waste materials from the job site and greatly reducing the
quantity of new materials needed to be brought to the site.
- A greatly accelerated work schedule,
in some cases involving total closure of segments of I-710 in one
direction at a time.
- Very imaginative, traffic control plans
intended to minimize the duration and negative impacts of reconstruction
activities.
- A design that emphasized constructability
and contractor innovation.
- Incentives and innovative contracting
techniques to reward contractors for early completion and for exceeding
specification requirements.
This table presents a summary
of the reconstruction proposals of Caltrans and the four workshop teams.
In making comparison be cautioned that the scope of work varies between
the different proposals and the life cycle costs and the user costs have
yet to be finalized. For example, while the Blue and Brown teams
proposals show the lowest initial cost, the yellow team proposal may have
a lower life cycle cost and the Green team proposal may result in the
lowest user costs.
|
I-710 RECONSTRUCTION
PROPOSALS
|
|
Team
|
Surface Type
|
Estimated
Construction
Time
|
Traffic Control Features
|
Estimated
Construction
Cost
|
|
Lanes Replaced
|
|
Caltrans
Initial
Proposal
|
Concrete
|
3 years
|
Night and weekend
work only
Maintain at least
2 lanes in each direction at all times
|
$60.8 million
|
| Outside 2 lanes &
Outside shoulders |
|
Blue
|
Stone Matrix
Asphalt
|
10 months
(2 construct-ion seasons
of 5 months each)
|
Full closure between
major interchanges - one direction at a time
Truck traffic to and
from port diverted to concrete lined Los Angeles River Channel
running parallel to project
Non-work side restriped
to carry 2 lanes of traffic in each direction
|
$72.3 million
|
|
All lanes and both shoulders
|
|
Yellow
|
Concrete
|
18 weekends
|
Full closure of approximately
3-4 mile sections in one direction at a time during weekends
Traffic from closed
direction detoured to parallel roads
All lanes and shoulders
open Monday through Friday
|
$87.6 million
|
|
All lanes and both shoulders
|
|
Green
|
Concrete
|
6 months
(+18 months for crossroad
bridges)
|
Replace all crossroad
structures with clear span sections
Maintain 4 lanes in
each direction at all times by shifting lanes from side to side
to create 2 lane wide work zones throughout the entire project
length
|
$191.5 million
|
|
All lanes and both shoulders
|
|
Brown
|
Superpave Hot Mix
Asphalt
|
42 weeks
|
Schedule lane closure
to off peak nights and weekends only, when facility has excess
capacity
Maintain 4 lanes in
each direction during high volume hours
|
$64.9 million
|
|
All lanes and both shoulders
|
This table presents a summary
of the reconstruction proposals of Caltrans and the four workshop teams.
In making comparison be cautioned that the scope of work varies between
the different proposals and the life cycle costs and the user costs have
yet to be finalized. For example, while the Blue and Brown teams
proposals show the lowest initial cost, the yellow team proposal may have
a lower life cycle cost and the Green team proposal may result in the
lowest user costs.
PAVEMENT RENEWAL FOR URBAN
FREEWAYS
COST ANALYSIS SUMMARY LA-710
(LONG BEACH FREEWAY)
by CALTRANS
| |
GREEN
|
BROWN
|
BLUE
|
YELLOW
|
|
ROADWAY ITEMS
|
122,610,000
|
62,340,000
|
72,330,000
|
87,480,000
|
|
STRUCTURE ITEMS
|
65,200,000
|
2,604,000
|
0
|
100,000
|
|
SUBTOTAL CONSTRCTION
|
187,810,000
|
64,944,000
|
72,330,000
|
87,580,000
|
|
RIGHT OF WAY (Current
Value)
|
3,710,000
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
|
TOTAL PROJECT COST
|
191,520,000
|
64,944,000
|
72,330,000
|
87,580,000
|
GREEN: PCC solution 12"
doweled PCC pavement over 14" of LCB (existing pavement recycled
on site)
BROWN: AC solution/Rubblize
existing PCC and CTB and overlay with 8" of AC (Polymer)
BLUE: Stone Matarix Asphalt
(SMA) solution, ( 8 3/4" overlay) over existing PCC (localized repairs
needed).
YELLOW: PCC solution. Recycle
existing 8" PCC and 8" of CTB and stabilize with cement and
replace on subgrade (18" to 12").
Then place PCC pavement 12"(inside
lanes) to 14" (outside lanes).
Lessons Learned
By any measure, this workshop was an unqualified success. Caltrans was
provided with many new ideas and options that will not only impact the
I-710 project but many other projects in the years to come. Just as importantly,
we learned that this concept - approaching a difficult issue with an interdisciplinary
team made up of members from all facets of the industry - was highly successful.
Each team generated its own synergy and enthusiasm as the team members
fashioned a solution that considered the combined expertise of the team.
Clearly, the special problems involved with the reconstruction of a heavily
traveled urban freeway lend themselves to this approach.
While many of the engineering
ideas produced by the teams are still being analyzed, some very important
"general principles" emerged:
- Short-term freeway closures (usually
one direction at a time for two to three days over a weekend) are
a viable technique that can dramatically lower costs and just as dramatically
shorten overall construction time. (See figure 1.)
- The traveling public will tolerate,
perhaps even prefer, a relatively few short-term closures if the alternate
is an extended period of congestion due to reduced lanes and construction-related
delays.
- Public relations issues should be considered
in the decision-making process, even as early as the project-concept
stage.
- Careful use of "excess capacity" on
nights and weekends, when combined with a public relations campaign,
can create acceptable short-term work areas and still control cost
and congestion. (See figure 2.)
- It is much more cost-effective to make
relatively minor modifications to the design of a current project
to accommodate the future reconstruction project than it is to deal
with inadequate widths and vertical clearances as a part of that future
reconstruction project.
- A 40-year (or longer) pavement design
life is possible and is very cost-effective on urban freeways, considering
the user costs associated with pavement reconstruction on these major
routes. (See figure 3.)
Where Do We Go From Here?
Based on the initial success of the Los Angeles workshop, other states
are planning their own workshops to examine special projects in their
state. In addition, the FHWA Highway Operations Division has just initiated
a major effort to emphasize the methods and benefits of accelerated construction
and maintenance. These activities will promote concepts, materials, methods,
and a customer-oriented mind set. The goals are to build projects faster
with less disruption to the traveling public and to ensure the safety
and the quality of the completed project. The Los Angeles workshop has
shown that these goals are realistic and achievable.
David O. Cox is a senior
engineer in FHWA's Office of Engineering. He deals with contract administration
and innovative contracting techniques on a nationwide basis. He previously
served as assistant division administrator in Tennessee, technical systems
development engineer in Florida, and area engineer in Louisiana. Cox has
a bachelor's degree in civil engineering from Oregon State University
and a master's degree in civil engineering from Louisiana State University.
He is a registered professional engineer in Louisiana.
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