Transportation asset management (TAM) is an approach to more than optimize the use of transportation resources. It may also be used to critically provide a wider decision framework to manage transportation infrastructure risk. TAM attempts to: 1) optimally allocate what resources are available to needed transportation investments, as well as, 2) manage and reduce risk to the agency and society in general. The first part of this paper is concerned with the adoption of TAM. It is unfortunate that with a crisis in transportation infrastructure management (i.e., in roadways, bridges, culverts, and slopes, etc.), there has been some resistance in adopting recognizing best practice management techniques, including TAM. TAM has in some instances been itself a high-risk exercise. Important lessons can be learnt from "Generation 1" TAM project efforts (including some significant project failures) and from "Generation 2" efforts that are now showing clear success. The second part of this paper briefly introduces some of the "green" ideas and benefits that may accrue with TAM, and points to this as the next generation of TAM development. Specifically, contemporary TAM (and the software systems that support it) is a powerful enabler for implementing practical eco-friendly policies and techniques. The paper draws on experience of undertaking TAM in a dozen DOT's in Canada and the US to date. For the covering abstract of this conference see ITRD number E220308.
Abstract