Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume

Several past studies have attempted to quantify the impact of winter weather conditions on highway mobility in terms of traffic volume, speed, and capacity. While consistent in their general findings, these studies have shown considerably different results in terms of effect size and contributing fa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Donaher, Garrett
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8241
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-8241
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-82412014-06-18T03:51:39Z Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume Donaher, Garrett winter maintenance road surface condition road surface index speed volume winter weather Several past studies have attempted to quantify the impact of winter weather conditions on highway mobility in terms of traffic volume, speed, and capacity. While consistent in their general findings, these studies have shown considerably different results in terms of effect size and contributing factors. More importantly, most of these studies have not attempted to model the effects of winter maintenance operations on mobility or isolate these effects from those due to snowstorm characteristics, rendering their results and the proposed methods of limited use for estimating the benefits of maintenance activities. This research attempts to address this gap through a statistical analysis of a data set that is unique in terms of spatial and temporal coverage and data completeness. The data set includes both event based and hourly observations of road weather and surface conditions, maintenance operations, traffic volume and speed, as well as several other measures, from 21 highway sections across the province of Ontario. Event based information is available for six winter seasons (2000 to 2006) at 19 of the sites. For this event based data a matched pair technique was employed to determine the changes in traffic volumes and speeds under matched conditions with and without snow events. A regression analysis was subsequently performed to relate the changes in traffic volume and speed over an event to changes in various contributing factors such as highway type, snow event characteristics and road surface conditions. A case study was conducted to illustrate the application of the developed models for quantifying the mobility impact of road surface condition and the mobility benefit of winter maintenance operations. Complete hourly records were available for all 21 sites for three winter seasons. This was used to perform the evaluation on an hourly basis. A matching technique is employed to assign hour-by-hour median speeds observed under typical weather and road surface conditions to each hour of a snowstorm event. A regression analysis is subsequently performed to relate changes from average hourly speed to various contributing factors such as highway type, weather conditions and maintenance operations. Effects of maintenance operations are represented by an intermediate variable called road surface condition index (RSI). A case study is conducted to illustrate the application of the developed models for quantifying the mobility impact of winter snowstorms and the mobility benefit of maintenance operations. The models developed in these analyses confirmed the relationships between weather variables and traffic volume and speed described in the literature. In addition a strong association between road surface condition and traffic volumes and speed was identified. 2014-01-29T17:26:08Z 2014-01-29T17:26:08Z 2014-01-29 2014 Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8241 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic winter maintenance
road surface condition
road surface index
speed
volume
winter
weather
spellingShingle winter maintenance
road surface condition
road surface index
speed
volume
winter
weather
Donaher, Garrett
Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume
description Several past studies have attempted to quantify the impact of winter weather conditions on highway mobility in terms of traffic volume, speed, and capacity. While consistent in their general findings, these studies have shown considerably different results in terms of effect size and contributing factors. More importantly, most of these studies have not attempted to model the effects of winter maintenance operations on mobility or isolate these effects from those due to snowstorm characteristics, rendering their results and the proposed methods of limited use for estimating the benefits of maintenance activities. This research attempts to address this gap through a statistical analysis of a data set that is unique in terms of spatial and temporal coverage and data completeness. The data set includes both event based and hourly observations of road weather and surface conditions, maintenance operations, traffic volume and speed, as well as several other measures, from 21 highway sections across the province of Ontario. Event based information is available for six winter seasons (2000 to 2006) at 19 of the sites. For this event based data a matched pair technique was employed to determine the changes in traffic volumes and speeds under matched conditions with and without snow events. A regression analysis was subsequently performed to relate the changes in traffic volume and speed over an event to changes in various contributing factors such as highway type, snow event characteristics and road surface conditions. A case study was conducted to illustrate the application of the developed models for quantifying the mobility impact of road surface condition and the mobility benefit of winter maintenance operations. Complete hourly records were available for all 21 sites for three winter seasons. This was used to perform the evaluation on an hourly basis. A matching technique is employed to assign hour-by-hour median speeds observed under typical weather and road surface conditions to each hour of a snowstorm event. A regression analysis is subsequently performed to relate changes from average hourly speed to various contributing factors such as highway type, weather conditions and maintenance operations. Effects of maintenance operations are represented by an intermediate variable called road surface condition index (RSI). A case study is conducted to illustrate the application of the developed models for quantifying the mobility impact of winter snowstorms and the mobility benefit of maintenance operations. The models developed in these analyses confirmed the relationships between weather variables and traffic volume and speed described in the literature. In addition a strong association between road surface condition and traffic volumes and speed was identified.
author Donaher, Garrett
author_facet Donaher, Garrett
author_sort Donaher, Garrett
title Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume
title_short Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume
title_full Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume
title_fullStr Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Winter Road Conditions on Highway Speed and Volume
title_sort impact of winter road conditions on highway speed and volume
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8241
work_keys_str_mv AT donahergarrett impactofwinterroadconditionsonhighwayspeedandvolume
_version_ 1716670380810174464