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Transpo - Chapter 1
Transpo - Chapter 1
(TRANSENGG)
MODULE #1
Transportation Engineering
Holy Angel University
School of Engineering and Architecture
Department of Civil Engineering
Transportation Engineering
Route #1
Transportation Planning &
Engineering
Introduction
This lecture aims to introduce the different concepts and terms that are
needed to understand transportation engineering in a more detailed
manner. The basic terminologies will be defined and explained thoroughly
to students to strengthen their foundation in understanding transportation
References Rogers, M. (2016). Highway engineering. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons
Mannering F. (2009). Principles of Highway Engineering and Traffic Analysis (4th
ed.).
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Learning Activities
Shown here is the path to be taken Note: Each part of the route can
in order to reach the next route. only be accessed once the previous
Finishing all the routes while one is accomplished.
acquiring satisfactory ratings for
each checkpoint ensures that you
will pass this course.
Link 1
Route #1
CP-1
Link 2
CP-2
Link 3
Route #2
Formative Assessments Submission Dates Type/Format
-Link 1 07/19/2020 Online/PDF
-Link 2 08/25/2020 Online/PDF
-Link 3 10/16/2020 Online/PDF
Summative Assessments Prerequisite/s Type
-Checkpoint 1 Route 1 MCQ
-Checkpoint 2 Links 1-3 Individualized Exam
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1.1 Transportation Engineering
Transportation is
1. All about moving goods and people from one place to another.
2. Safe, efficient, reliable, and sustainable movement of persons and goods over time and space.
Transportation Engineering is the application of technology and scientific principles to the planning,
functional design, operation, and management of facilities for any mode of transportation in order to
provide for the safe, rapid, comfortable, convenient, economical, and environmentally compatible
movement of people and goods.
Transportation Engineering...
Focuses on the infrastructure of transportation
Design runways, build bridges, layout roads and plan docking facilities
Look at traffic patterns, determine when new transport facilities are needed and come up with
better ways
Application of technology and scientific principles to the planning, functional design, operation,
and
Management of facilities
1.2 Traffic Engineering is that phase of transportation engineering which deals with the planning,
geometric design and traffic operations of roads, streets, and highways, their networks, terminals,
abutting lands, and relationships with other modes of transportation.
Primary Objectives
1. The principal objective of traffic engineering is to provide a safe system for road traffic including
pedestrians and bicycles.
2. Provision of efficient management & operations of road transport network
3. Other objectives can be:
– Sustainability
– Environmental impacts
– Comfort & convenience of the user
– Economy
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1.3 Modes of Transportation
1. By Land
o Railways
- Surface
- Underground
- Elevated
- Light rail transit (LRT)
o Road Transport
2. By Air
o Air Transport
3. By Water
o Water Transport
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4. Multi-objective
5. Multi-modal
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1.10 Major disciplines of transportation
1. Transportation Planning
- involves the development of a transport model
2. Geometric Design
- Deals with physical proportioning of other transportation facilities
o Cross-sectional features,
o Horizontal alignment,
o Vertical alignment and
o Intersections
3. Pavement Design
- Deals with the structural design of roads, both (bituminous and concrete)
o Drainage design
o Functional design
o Structural design
4. Traffic Engineering
- covers a broad range of engineering applications with a focus on
o The safety of the public,
o The efficient use of transportation resources, and
o The mobility of people and goods.
o
1.11 Additional disciplines of transportation
1. Public transportation
- study of the transportation system that meets the travel need of several people by sharing a vehicle.
o characteristics of various modes;
o planning,
o management and operations; and
o policies for promoting public transportation.
2. Financial and economic analysis
- tries to quantify the economic benefit which includes saving in travel time, fuel consumption, etc.
3. Environmental impact assessment
- attempts in quantifying the environmental impacts and tries to evolve strategies for the mitigation
and reduction of the impact due to both construction and operation.
4. Accident analysis and reduction
- looks at the causes of accidents, from the perspective of human, road, and vehicle and formulate
plans for the reduction.
5. Intelligent transport system
- offers better mobility, efficiency, and safety with the help of the state-of-the-art technology
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1.12 Factors in Transportation Development
1. Economic Factors
2. Geographical Factor
3. Political Polices
4. Military
5. Technological Factor
6. Urbanization
7. Competition
1. Accessibility – refers to the cost of getting to and from the mode in question, and depends
primarily on geographical extensiveness.
a. Highway system – all individual property have direct access to a public road
b. Water transportation – a direct access is possible only at port facilities located on
the banks of navigable rivers, canals, or the seacoast.
2. Mobility – is described in terms of speed or travel time.
3. Productivity – refers to some measure of the total amount of transportation provided per unit
time. Amount of transportation is usually thought of as the product of the volume of the goods
or passengers carried and distance. (tons-miles per year or passenger-kilometers per day)
Costs – are described in terms of capital costs and operating costs.
Capital cost – are those of major items that must be purchased before an enterprise can
function.
As with transportation, capital costs are usually thought of as including (1) right-of-way costs (for the
transportation facilities) (2) construction costs of the facilities, and (3) costs of acquiring vehicles and
other equipment.
Operating Costs – are the day-to-day expenditures involved in carrying out the enterprise, and are
usually thought of as including the costs of labor, fuel, expendable parts such as tires or batteries for
vehicles, and the maintenance of facilities and equipment.
Markets – are described in terms of the extent to which the mode in question carries passengers or
freight.
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1.14 Classifications of Passenger Markets
1. Urban Travel – within a single urban area or
2. Intercity Travel – between urban areas
3. Intercity Markets – depends on the trips either short (less than 160 km),
medium (160 – 800 km) and long trips (greater than 800 km)
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Two groups of transit passenger
1. Commuters or Choice Riders – persons making work trips into dense central business
districts.
2. Captive Riders – those without access to automobiles.
1.16 Air Transportation System – includes commercial airlines, airfreight, carriers, and general aviation
(private aircrafts).
Major Market is intercity passenger travel, particularly long-distance travel.
The primary service characteristics of air transportation
1. High line-haul speed
2. Accessibility is limited – less important due to great length of most trips made by air.
3. Capacities of Individual aircrafts are moderate, but productivity is high due to the
very high speeds
Capital and operating costs are both quite high for the commercial air system, but once again, high
productivity results in moderate costs per passenger carried.
Costs of general aviation airports and aircraft are moderate and are usually in the same range as those
of highway facilities and vehicles of comparable capacity.
Environmental Impacts – are significant especially the noise impacts of commercial aviation, but are of
much less concern than those of the highway system.
1.17 Water transportation System – consists of coastwise ocean shipping and barge lines operating
on inlang waterways.
Provides low speed and relatively low accessibility, but extremely high
-
capacities.
Capital costs of vessels is high, but operating costs per ton-mile are extremely low.
Environmental Impacts – are relatively low but water pollution from routine discharges of oil and other
pollutants, as well as from major oil spills involving tankers, is a significant problem.
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1.19 Other modes
Cable and belt system – are used extensively for transportation of freight within industrial complexes.
- Are used for specialized passenger transportation systems such as ski lifts
and moving belts in airports.
1. User Charges – include direct charges such as fares and toll and, more importantly, indirect
sources such as fuel taxes. Major share of the financing comes from the users and some degree
proportional to the extent of their use of the system.
2. General Fund Revenues – collected by the different level of government are derived from regular
taxes. The General fund has no particular relationship between the source of funds and the
activity on which they are spent.
3. Private Investments – occurs in the parts of the transportation system that are normally under
private control and in cases where public agencies issue franchises, as in the case of toll facilities,
or purchase services under contract.
4. Cross-subsidization – occurs when revenues collected from users of one type of transportation
system are used to finance some other type of system. A common example in recent years has
been the use of gasoline tax revenues and bridge tolls to finance public transits.
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