Managing Ancillary Transportation Assets: The State of the Practice
Publication: Journal of Infrastructure Systems
Volume 20, Issue 1
Abstract
Historically, transportation asset management has focused more on pavements and bridges, and less on ancillary assets such as traffic signs and guardrails. This paper synthesizes the state of practice of ancillary transportation asset management to assess the needs for successful implementation of such programs by highlighting data collection strategies and costs, data analysis tools, and data use in decision making, especially as it relates to asset prioritization and quantifying the benefits of ancillary asset management. The paper focuses on 10 asset classes selected from a review of literature: culverts, earth retaining structures, guardrails, mitigation features, pavement markings, sidewalks and curbs, street lighting, traffic signals, traffic signs, and utilities and manholes. The findings indicate that a number of agencies are making significant efforts to manage these assets with a range of asset management policies, system/program integration approaches, data collection methods and costs, benefit quantification, and asset category prioritization approaches. The results highlight the state of practice of managing ancillary transportation assets, revealing the dynamic nature of these activities as agencies evolve their activities to higher levels of program maturity.
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Acknowledgments
This study was jointly funded by the Georgia Department of Transportation and the United States Department of Transportation through the Georgia Tech University Transportation Center under the “Comprehensive Transportation Asset Management: Risk-Based Inventory Expansion and Data Needs” project. The authors wish to express their appreciation to the agency officials who participated in the survey. The authors, however, remain exclusively responsible for the material presented in this paper.
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© 2013 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Apr 4, 2012
Accepted: Apr 17, 2013
Published online: Dec 23, 2013
Published in print: Mar 1, 2014
Discussion open until: May 23, 2014
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