جزییات کتاب
This 2011 publication presents a scanning study that examined innovative design practices and techniques used in other countries to improve the operational performance of congested freeway facilities without compromising safety. Continued growth in travel on congested urban freeway corridors exceeds the ability of agencies to provide sufficient solutions and alternatives based on traditional roadway expansion and improvement projects. Several countries are implementing managed motorway concepts to improve motorway capacity without acquiring more land and building large-scale infrastructure projects. The Federal Highway Administration, American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, and National Cooperative Highway Research Program sponsored a scanning study of England, Germany, the Netherlands, and Spain to examine the use of innovative geometric design practices and techniques to improve the operational performance of congested freeway facilities without compromising safety. Managed motorways are a combination of active or dynamically managed operational regimes, specific designs of infrastructure, and technology solutions. The concept uses a range of traffic management measures to actively monitor the motorway and dynamically control speeds, add capacity, and inform road users of conditions on the network with the objective to optimize traffic and safety performance. Content: Front Matter • Table of Contents Executive Summary 1. Introduction 2. European Agency Approaches to Managed Motorways • 3. Key Findings • 4. Implementation Strategy Appendices • Glossary • Endnotes