FHWA Computation Procedure for the Pavement Condition Measures | Guide/Manual
Asset Management, PavementThis document provides transparency to to the public and aids state DOTs in computing pavement condition measures. It outlines the calculation steps for determining the minimum pavement condition levels by state and the DOT's progress towards their targets.
Michigan Infrastructure Asset Management Pilot Executive Summary | Case Study/Practice Example
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementThis report documents a collaborative regional asset management pilot project across infrastructure systems (roads, bridges, water, wastewater, stormwater, electric, gas, and broadband) and asset owners.
Publisher: Michigan Infrastructure Commission
Georgia DOT TAMP 2018-2027 | Plan
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementGeorgia DOT's 2018 TAMP focuses on pavements and bridges, the largest share of Georgia’s transportation assets. GDOT believes the key drivers of an effective TAMP include:
-Clear links between policy, goals/objectives and decisions at all levels within the Department
-An understanding of the connection between proposed investments and expected results
-A long-term view of asset performance
-Feedback loops linking observed performance to planning and programming decisions
-Integration of data to support and drive data-driven decisions
-Georgia DOT leadership’s commitment
Publisher: Georgia Department of Transportation
New Mexico DOT TAMP 2018 | Plan
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementAs part of its long-term strategy for efficiently maintaining the 25,062 highway lane miles and 2,976 bridges under its jurisdiction, the New Mexico Department of Transportation compiled and released a 94-page Transportation Asset Management Plan in mid-April 2018 that advocates for $40 million a year in bridge revitalization funding and $294 million annually for interstate and non-interstate pavement funding. This is NMDOT's first TAMP.
Publisher: New Mexico Department of Transportation
Iowa DOT TAMP 2018 | Plan
Asset Management, Bridge, PavementThe 2018 IowaDOT TAMP focuses on management, preservation, and improvement of the existing highway system. The TAMP also connects to other IowaDOT plans, Iowa in Motion and system/modal plans to Iowa DOT’s Five-Year Transportation Improvement Program (Five-Year Program). Iowa in Motion defines a vision for the transportation system over the next 20 years, while the Five-Year Program identifies specific investments over the next five years. The TAMP has a 10 year planning horizon and helps ensure that investments in the Five-Year Program are consistent with Iowa DOT’s longer-term vision.
TAM Knowledge Portal (NCHRP 08-36 Task 125A) | Research Report, Website
The AASHTO TAM Portal is a transportation asset management knowledge portal: a searchable database of links to a wide range of resources related to transportation asset management. The interactive portal is designed to provide transportation asset management practitioners with the ability to search and access relevant documents and/or web links to information from multiple sources. The report documents the results of the activities carried out under the continuation of NCHRP Project 08-36(125).
Connecticut's Statewide Long-Range Transportation Plan 2018-2050 | Plan
This long range plan presents a framework to aid Connecticut in their decision making process for the near- and long-term. It includes an assessment of the current system, financial analyses, and ultimately strategies to meet the agency's goals and vision. CTDOT relied on partners in the public and private sectors and throughout their communities to develop this document. It addresses all transportation modes: highways, bridges, rail, bus, airports, ports, urban systems, and regional trails as well as the distinct needs of people in freight, active, and public transport.
Interstate Highway Pavement Sampling Quality Management Plan | Guide/Manual
Asset Management, PavementThis document details the Quality Management Plan (QPM) for an FHWA study collecting and analyzing 7500 miles of pavement condition data on the Interstate System. The project seeks to understand and verify the data stored in the Highway Performance Monitoring System (HPMS) by checking it with a national baseline, and this plan intends to control the quality of the project's data collection. This QMP outlines the standards and protocols for their data deliverables, explains how manual raters are certified, describes equipment calibration, certification, and verification, reports on the data quality checks, and finishes with a review of the data deliverables.
What Moves You Arizona 2040 | Plan
This long range plan presents Arizona's Recommended Investment Choice (RIC), a policy defining the intended investment levels for preservation, modernization and expansion of the Arizona highway system. The RIC is developed from an understanding of ADOT's vision and goals, the current highway trends and conditions, and an analysis of forecasted funding and investment needs.
Highway Bridge Conditions: Issues for Congress | Research Report
Asset Management, BridgeThis document summarizes current and historic highway bridge conditions. The authors outline issues for the US Congress related to the implementation of the FAST Act and requirements for bridge spending generally. These topics include: state bridge spending, funding levels for bridges, tolling, spending on off-system bridges, and oversight and inspection issues.
VTrans2040 | Plan
The 2040 update to Virginia's long range transportation plan includes a Vision Plan and a Needs Assessment which builds upon the work previously conducted in VTrans 2035. This update creates a link between Virginia's long range plan and funding process (SMART SCALE).
Intergovernmental Agreement Between Illinois Department of Transportation, MPO, and Transit Provider | Research Report
Safety, System PerformanceThis document is a sample intergovernmental agreement form created by the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), which includes the terms of a performance data management plan to which IDOT, an MPO, and a Transit Provider would agree. It includes the rights and responsibilities of each participating organization, data-sharing obligations, target-setting processes, and performance reporting targets.
Publisher: Illinois Department of Transportation