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Federal Highway Administration. Highway Safety Analysis: Engineering. Kenneth Epstein, P.E. Federal Highway Administration Office of Safety Programs. Safety Data and Analysis Tools Workshop March 28, 2006. Presentation Topics. Safety Analyst Interactive Highway Safety Design Module
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Federal Highway Administration Highway Safety Analysis:Engineering Kenneth Epstein, P.E. Federal Highway Administration Office of Safety Programs Safety Data and Analysis Tools Workshop March 28, 2006
Presentation Topics • Safety Analyst • Interactive Highway Safety Design Module • Highway Safety Manual • Digital Highway Measurement System • New Approaches to Highway Safety Analysis course
Highway Safety Improvement Program Policy—Each State shall develop and implement on a continuing basis, a highway safety improvement program which has the overall objective of reducing the number and severity of accidents and decreasing the potential for accidents on all highways.
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users • Established the HSIP as a “core” program • Funding substantially increased ($5.06 million over 4 years) • Requirement for Strategic Highway Safety Plans that provide a comprehensive, collaborative and data-driven approach to highway safety • Greater flexibility
Requirements for an EffectiveHSIP • Identifying candidate sites for improvement • Diagnosing the nature of the safety problem • Selecting appropriate countermeasures based on an economic appraisal of benefits • Prioritizing the implementation of improvements • Evaluating the effectiveness of improvements
SafetyAnalyst Will provide state-of-the art analytical tools for use in the decision making process to identify and manage a systemwide program of site-specific improvements to enhance highway safety by cost-effective means
SafetyAnalyst Modules • Module #1- Network Screening • Module #2 - Diagnosis and Countermeasure Selection • Module #3 - Economic Appraisal and priority ranking • Module #4 – Evaluation
SafetyAnalyst Website www.safetyanalyst.org
Interactive Highway Safety Design Model (IHSDM) • The IHSDM is a suite of software analysis tools that support project-level geometric design decisions by estimating the expected safety and operational performance • Current Version—Released in 2004 • Facility Type—Two-lane rural roads
IHSDM Evaluation Modules • Policy Review • Crash prediction • Design Consistency • Intersection Review • Traffic Analysis
IHSDM Future Plans • 2006: Updated release for two-lane rural highways • 2008: Release with crash prediction capabilities for: - Two-lane rural highway crash prediction - Urban & suburban arterial crash prediction - Multilane rural highway crash predicition
Additional Information on IHSDM www.tfhrc.gov/safety/ihsdm/ihsdm.htm
Highway Safety Manual HSM Purpose: To provide users with the best factual information and tools in a useful form to facilitate roadway planning, design, operation, and maintenance decisions based on explicit considerations of their safety consequences
HSM Targeted Users Primary Users • Front-line decision makers • Analysts studying the effect of actions on road users • Planners, designers and those responsible for operations and maintenance Secondary Users • Management • Educational Institutions
Proposed HSM Outline • Part I – Introduction and Fundamentals • Part II – Knowledge • Part III – Predictive Methods • Part IV – Safety Management of a Roadway System • Part V – Safety Evaluation
Digital HighwayMeasurement System • An instrumented vehicle that uses multiple, state-of-the-art technologies and computer analyses to provide accurate and efficient analyses of roadway geometry and pavement conditions • Collects raw highway data and processes the data into readily usable electronic data files
DHM Vehicle • Prototype vehicle has been developed. • The vehicle keeps pace with traffic and can gather the necessary information without causing traffic congestion or placing surveyors at risk. • Information can be collected at extremely precise levels.
DHM Data Currently Collected • Horizontal and vertical alignments • Roadway and roadside video from two digital cameras for eventual automated inventories of most highway features • Detailed cross-sections including ditch sections and safety hardware location and identification
DHM Pooled Fund Project Goals of Pooled Fund Project • To finalize development of the existing vehicle and vehicle specifications • Explore the incorporation of new sensors and algorithms that expand the number of items measured and/or the accuracy of the data collected • Develop a second van
Additional Information Office of Research and Development Website www.tfhrc.gov/safety/safety.htm
New Approaches to Highway Safety Analysis Course Purpose—To help participants gain an understanding of the Highway Safety Improvement Program processes, safety engineering principles, and human factors issues relative to traffic and road safety
Course Information • Course offered through the National Highway Institute • 3-day course (1½ days of “core” materials and 1½ days of case studies) • Case studies for Roadway Departure, Intersection-related crashes and Pedestrian-related crashes
Course Scheduling National Highway Institute • Website: www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov • Contact: Sherron Monts (703-235-0534)