1 / 18

William Lohr, P.E Federal Highway Administration Minnesota Division Office

William Lohr, P.E Federal Highway Administration Minnesota Division Office. Every Day Counts A Toolkit for Shortening Project Delivery . The toolkit is developed to guide and support State and local agencies in the use of underutilized flexibilities in the law

tallis
Download Presentation

William Lohr, P.E Federal Highway Administration Minnesota Division Office

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. William Lohr, P.E Federal Highway Administration Minnesota Division Office

  2. Every Day CountsA Toolkit forShortening Project Delivery • The toolkit is developed to guide and support State and local agencies in the use of underutilized flexibilities in the law • Aids in development of processes and agreements that minimize duplication of effort and reduce delays in project implementation

  3. Project Delivery Opportunitiesfor EDC • Planning • NEPA • Right of Way (ROW) & Utilities • Design • Construction

  4. Planning & Environmental Linkages (PEL) Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • PEL provides transportation agencies with tools and resources that introduce environmental considerations early in planning and support carrying planning analyses and decisions into the NEPA process. • Benefits: • Seamless decision–making process • Minimizes duplication of effort • Promotes environmental stewardship • Reduces delays in project • implementation

  5. Expanding Use of Programmatic Agreements Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • Expansion of new and existing programmatic agreements to a regional or national level will establish a streamlined process for handling routine environmental requirements for commonly encountered project types. • Benefits: • Improved project decision-making • Reduction in project delivery times • (process streamlining). • Mechanism to save and focus staff time.

  6. In-Lieu Fees & Mitigation Banking Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • Increased usage of banking and in-lieu fee programs rather than project-by-project mitigation will expedite highway project delivery. • Benefits: • Creates a more streamlined and • concurrent process • Improves and expedites project • delivery • Reduce the need for piece-meal, • project-by-project mitigation • Expedited regulatory review and permit processing

  7. Enhanced Technical Assistance Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • FHWA will demonstrate the effectiveness of these key streamlining measures on a small number of select active EIS projects facing challenges with ongoing environmental issues and/or interagency coordination and other concerns that are effecting (or have the potential to effect) the timely completion of the project development process. • Benefits: • Identification and implementation of solutions to resolve reasons for delay. • Facilitates interagency coordination and collaboration

  8. Flexibilities in Right of Way Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • Evaluation, clarification and demonstration of the available flexibilities already existing in FHWA’s current project delivery ROW processes and policies. • Benefits: • Improved project decision-making • Reduction in project delivery times • Cost containment

  9. Flexibilities in Utility Relocation Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • The initiative will spotlight existing flexibilities currently in place under Federal law and regulations and describe techniques that foster effective utility coordination during project development which warrant more widespread use. • Benefits: • Improved communication, coordination and cooperation; • Collaborative decisions to accommodate or relocate utilities; • Shared risk, gains and costs; • Increased owner control; and • Reductions in project development, construction time and project costs.

  10. Construction Manager / General Contractor (CMGC) Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • CM/GC occupies the middle ground between the traditional (DBB) and (DB). CM/GC provides for project acceleration by allowing the owner to contract with a construction manager early in the design process and agree to a negotiated price for construction later before the design is complete. • Benefits: • Reduces Costs • No compromise on quality • Enhances potential for creativity

  11. Design Build Planning NEPA ROW / Utilities Design / Construction • With DB project delivery, the designer-builder assumes responsibility for the majority of the design work and all construction activities. This provides the designer-builder with increased flexibility to be innovative, along with greater responsibility and risk. • Benefits: • Considerable time savings over the traditional process of Design-Bid-Build (DBB) • Allows design to be tailored to contractor’s resources • Allows quality evaluation factors and best-value selection criteria when selecting contractors

  12. Accelerating Technology and Innovation • Every Day Counts is not about inventing the next "big thing“ • It's about taking effective, proven and market-ready technologies and getting them into widespread use • By advancing 21st century solutions, we can improve safety, reduce congestion and keep America moving

  13. Warm Mix Asphalt • Allows a reduction in asphalt mixture production & placement temperatures • Benefits: • Provides better compaction • Improves pavement performance • Reduce worker fatigue • Reduces fossil fuel consumption • Reduces CO2e & other emissions • Extend paving season • Allows for longer hauling distances

  14. Prefabricated Bridge Elements & Systems • Prefabricated bridge elements and systems manufactured on-site or off-site, under controlled conditions, and brought to the job location ready to install • Benefits: • Reduces onsite construction time • Minimizes traffic disruption – months to days • Improves construction zone safety • Improved product quality – controlled environment, cure times, easier access, etc. constructability of bridge designs • Reduces environmental impact

  15. Geosynthetic Reinforced Soil • Fast, cost-effective bridge support method using alternating layers of compacted fill and layers of geosynthetic reinforcement to provide bridge support. • Lots of Benefits: • Eliminates approach slab or construction • joint at the bridge-to-road interface • Reduced construction time (Complete in days!) • Less dependent on weather conditions • Flexible design – easily modified for unforeseen site conditions • Built with common equipment and materials

  16. Safety Edge • Sloped pavement edge at a 30º angle which allows drivers a more controlled re-entry back onto the roadway after tire drop-off • Benefits: • Reduces crashes due to edge • drop-off and uncontrolled recovery • Minimal cost (less than 1% on • 2-lane highway) • Consolidated edge reduces edge raveling, increases durability

  17. Adaptive Signal Control • ACS measures traffic flow and adjusts signal timing to promote smooth flow of traffic along arterial streets • Benefits: • ACS improves travel time • reliability, reduces congestion, and smoothes traffic flow • Increases long-term viability of traffic signal operations • Widely deployable & uses existing control equipment

  18. Thank you!

More Related