Evaluation of Flood-Vulnerable Pavement Network in Support of Resilience in Pavement System Management

Author:

Hong Feng1ORCID,Wu Hui2ORCID,Li Jenny2,Paul Elizabeth2

Affiliation:

1. Texas State University, San Marcos, TX

2. Texas Department of Transportation, Austin, TX

Abstract

Transportation systems play a pivotal role in the nation’s economic and societal development. Transportation assets, such as pavements and bridges, are inevitably subject to the effects of climate and environment. These stressors mainly include flood, precipitation, heat, wildfire, and wind. Specifically, more extreme weather events, such as hurricanes and snowstorms, have occurred in recent years. This requires stakeholders to better prepare transportation infrastructure resilience in planning, design, construction, and management. Its importance is manifested through nationwide policy and state-level practice. For example, in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the FHWA directs all state DOTs to incorporate resilience in their transportation asset management plans. A critical element in resilience is to evaluate the effect of climatic or environmental stressors on facilities’ performance. This study examines the impact of flood on the TxDOT-managed pavement network. It proposes a method to evaluate the flood-vulnerable pavement network in the context of resilience. First, the GIS tool is used to overlap a 100-year frequency flood with the road network to identify weak pavement sections subject to flood risk. Second, a simulation is run to determine sections affected by flood over a 10-year analysis horizon. Then, different deterioration models are used to predict the network-level pavement performance, to reflect (1) normal deterioration without flood, (2) optimistic accelerated deterioration under flooding, and (3) pessimistic accelerated deterioration under flooding. It is found that the network-level pavement will experience varying levels of performance reduction, owing to a 100-year flood impact. The quantified performance change can serve to enhance infrastructure resilience preparation for more reliable pavement system management.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference15 articles.

1. Title 23, United States Code. https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/map21/docs/title23usc.pdf. Accessed July 20, 2022.

2. Code of Federal Regulations, Part 515 – Asset Management Plans. https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-23/chapter-I/subchapter-F/part-515. Accessed July 20, 2022.

3. Transportation Asset Management Plans. FHWA, U.S. Department of Transportation. https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/asset/plans.cfm. Accessed July 20, 2022.

4. Code of Federal Regulations, Part 667 – Periodic Evaluation of Facilities Repeatedly Requiring Repair and Reconstruction due to Emergency Events. https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-23/chapter-I/subchapter-G/part-667. Accessed July 20, 2022.

5. FHWA Order 5520, Transportation System Preparedness and Resilience to Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events. FHWA, U.S. Department of Transportation. https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/orders/5520.cfm. Accessed July 20, 2022.

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1. Assessment of flooding impact on thin pavement structure in Texas coastal region;International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology;2024-07

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