Handbook of Simplified Practice for Traffic Studies, Part 4: Sight distance.

Author(s)
Anderson-Wilk, M. (ed.)
Year
Abstract

The Iowa Highway Research Board has identified the development of a simplified handbook of transportation studies as a high priority for the state of Iowa. The Center for Transportation Research and Education (CTRE) at Iowa State University was chosen to develop such a handbook. A well-executed, well-documented study is critical in the decision-making process for many transportation-related projects and in reporting to elected officials and members of the community. As more research is conducted in the area of transportation, study procedures in many cases have become more complex. It is often difficult for local jurisdictions with limited staff, training, experience, and time availability to perform these studies. The most commonly used publication for traffic studies is geared toward transportation professionals and professional engineers. That defining document, Manual of Transportation Studies (Institute of Transportation Engineers, 2000), is over 500 pages and includes several dozen types of transportation studies. Many of the transportation studies described in the manual are rarely (if ever) used by local jurisdictions. Further, those studies that are frequently used are at times very complex and possibly very costly to perform exactly as described. Local jurisdictions without the staff expertise to understand and apply the manual’s various studies have a need for a simplified handbook of procedures to perform common traffic studies themselves or properly define a scope of work to hire a consultant to perform the studies. This handbook describes simplified procedures that are easy to apply and are written for all potential users (civil engineers and traffic engineers, public works mangers, city managers and attorneys, and the general public). This handbook has two primary objectives: The first objective is to develop a handbook of traffic studies that is convenient for Iowa jurisdictions to use in assessing traffic issues. The second objective is to develop a series of boilerplate scopes of work that local jurisdictions can use to hire outside consulting firms to perform traffic studies. This is Part 4 of the Handbook of Simplified Practice for Traffic Studies, 'Sight distance'. Sight distance is the length of roadway visible to a driver. The three types of sight distance common in roadway design are intersection sight distance, stopping sight distance, and passing sight distance. This handbook will not discuss passing sight distance because it primarily occurs in rural settings and this handbook generally addresses urban areas. (Information on passing sight distance can be found in Chapter 3 of the AASHTO Green Book and in the CTRE Iowa Traffic Control Devices and Pavement Markings manual.) (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20110387 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Ames, IA, Iowa State University, Center for Transportation Research and Education (CTRE), 2002, 28 p., 4 ref.; Iowa DOT Project TR-455 / CTRE Project 01-80

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.