The Impact of Disruptions along the I-95 Corridor on Congestion and Air Quality, Phase 2
Although the National Highway System provides an efficient network to move people and goods across the country, disruptions in the system can quickly bring the flow to a halt. The freeway-arterial corridors of the highway system are crucial nodes allowing users to enter and exit yet are vulnerable to considerable disruptions in the flow of traffic due to the frequency of closely spaced grade separated roadways and high traffic volumes surrounding interchanges. By analyzing the closure of the interchanges and assessing the subsequent traffic conditions throughout the network using travel demand modeling software, it is possible to determine the effects, adverse or not, of major closures. Such an assessment is purposeful, ensuring the resiliency of the freeway by understanding the resulting congestion to relieving or preventing its occurrence. Through a detailed understanding of the effects, transportation authorizes may be better able to maintain an efficient flow of people and goods. This research analyzes the prevailing traffic conditions along the Interstate-95 corridor in New Castle County, Delaware due to the closure of three separately analyzed freeway-arterial interchanges along I-95: SR 896, SR 1, and US 202. It examines the change in volume, change in speed, and change in volume to capacity ratio on the network from before to after conditions. Each interchange closure produced distinctive network traffic conditions. While SR 896 primarily induces local effects SR 1 and US 202 results in a wider expanse of effects along the I-95 corridor. Significant disruptions in the flow of the network were contained to a few major arterials particularly during morning and afternoon peak periods.
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- Summary URL:
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Supplemental Notes:
- This document was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Transportation, University Transportation Centers Program. Thesis title page: Impact of freeway-arterial interchange closure: an alternate route assessment using travel demand modeling for the state of Delaware.
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Corporate Authors:
Delaware Center for Transportation
University of Delaware
Newark, DE United States 19716Research and Innovative Technology Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Authors:
- Kropat, Elisa C
- Lee, Earl (Rusty)
- Publication Date: 2013-5
Language
- English
Media Info
- Media Type: Digital/other
- Edition: Final Report
- Features: Appendices; Figures; Maps; References; Tables;
- Pagination: 128p
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Air quality; Arterial highways; Highway capacity; Highway corridors; Incident management; Interchange ramps; Lane closure; Traffic congestion; Traffic diversion; Traffic volume; Travel demand
- Identifier Terms: Interstate 95
- Geographic Terms: Delaware
- Subject Areas: Environment; Highways; Operations and Traffic Management; I15: Environment; I70: Traffic and Transport;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01505681
- Record Type: Publication
- Contract Numbers: DTRT06-G-0026
- Files: UTC, TRIS, RITA, ATRI, USDOT
- Created Date: Jan 27 2014 11:27AM