Time series analysis of local authority policy interventions on highway works durations

Author:

Hussain Rizwana Shaheen1,Quddus Mohammed A.2,Enoch Marcus P.3,Ruikar Kirti D.4,Brien Nigel5,Gartside David6

Affiliation:

1. Traffic and Transportation Engineer, Communities and Place, Derby City Council, Derby, UK

2. Professor of Intelligent Transport Systems, Centre for Innovative and Collaborative Construction Engineering, School of Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK

3. Professor of Transport Strategy, Centre for Innovative and Collaborative Construction Engineering, School of Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK (corresponding author: )

4. Senior Lecturer in Architectural Engineering, Centre for Innovative and Collaborative Construction Engineering, School of Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK

5. Head of Traffic and Transportation, Communities and Place, Derby City Council, Derby, UK

6. Former Director, Strategic Partnership, Planning and Streetpride, Communities and Place, Derby City Council, Derby, UK

Abstract

Highway works are highly inconvenient and disruptive for society. Accordingly, four highway policy interventions were investigated in Derby, UK, for potential corresponding reductions in highway works durations. Time series analysis was used to test the durational impacts on works led by Highway Authorities (HAs) and utility industries. The modelling results demonstrated that a highway works management permit scheme (chargeable) reduced utility works durations by 5·4% (727 work days annually). Conversely, three conflated interventions – namely, the permit scheme (cost-free to HAs), JCB Pothole Master deployment and construction direct labour organisation – did not make any statistically significant difference to HA works durations; however, introducing an automated works order management system (Woms) reduced HA works duration by 34% (6519 work days annually). The key finding of this study is that chargeable permit schemes can create the impetus for change, as demonstrated by the utility industry. Furthermore, the Woms revealed that back-office efficiency can lead to on-site efficiency in works execution.

Publisher

Thomas Telford Ltd.

Subject

Transportation,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference43 articles.

1. Amec (International Association for the Measurement and Evaluation of Communication) (2002) Evaluation of Pavement Cut Impacts. Amec, London, UK.

2. Fatal accidents in nighttime vs. daytime highway construction work zones

3. Brady K, Burtwell M and Thomson J (2001) Mitigating the Disruption Caused by Utility Street Works. Transport Research Laboratory, Crowthorne, UK, TRL report 516.

4. Intervention Analysis with Applications to Economic and Environmental Problems

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1. Editorial;Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Transport;2021-08

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