How to Make Two-lane Rural Roads Safer

How to Make Two-lane Rural Roads Safer
Author: Ruediger Lamm
Publisher: Witpress
Total Pages: 152
Release: 2007
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN:

When accidents happen, drivers are blamed for the mishap. When drivers consistently fail at certain locations, it then becomes obvious that the problem lies not with them, but with the geometry of the road itself. Because accidents are not evenly distributed throughout the road network, locations with high accident rates are a clear indication that there are other factors involved, besides driver error, which are characterized by the road itself. In most countries, two-lane rural roads make up about 90 percent of rural networks and they account for over 60 percent of highway fatalities worldwide, approximately 500,000 people per year. The methodology described in this book will support the achievement of quantified measures of: design consistency; operating speed consistency; and, driving dynamic consistency. The safety criteria are then combined into an overall safety module for a simplified general overview of the safety evaluation process. The authors also encourage the coordination of safety concerns with important economic, environmental and aesthetic considerations. This book will be an invaluable aid to educators, students, consultants, highway engineers and administrators, as well as scientists in the fields of highway design and traffic safety engineering.

Economics of Design Standards for Low-volume Rural Roads

Economics of Design Standards for Low-volume Rural Roads
Author: Clarkson Hill Oglesby
Publisher:
Total Pages: 112
Release: 1969
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN:

he objective of this study is to examine prevailing rural design standards to determine their economic justification. This would evaluate in depth the cost of some of the most significant design practices (for example, roadway and shoulder width and surfacing type). Resulting user benefits, such as operating, accident and time savings would be weighed against the cost of individual features. In addition to the analysis of the user-benefit relationships, the economic and social consequences to local residents, businesses and communities should be studied and a suitable means of including them in the reckoning of warranted levels of improvement should be found.

Rural Roads and Bridges in the Midwest

Rural Roads and Bridges in the Midwest
Author: Norman Walzer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 136
Release: 1987
Genre: Bridges
ISBN:

An examination of the condition of infrastructure and the estimated cost of bringing roads and bridges to a safe and accepted condition in Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin.

Rural Local Roads

Rural Local Roads
Author: United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Public Works
Publisher:
Total Pages: 380
Release: 1949
Genre: Roads
ISBN: