November/December 2004
Managed Lanes
by Jon Obenberger
Combining access control, vehicle eligibility, and pricing strategies can help mitigate congestion and improve mobility on the Nation's busiest roadways.
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| A sign above the SR-91 Express (HOT) Lanes in Orange Country, CA, provides a toll-free telephone number and uses arrows to indicate "3+ Lane" and "Toll Lanes." Photo: Orange County Transportation Authority. |
As the public's desire to travel on highway facilities continues to grow, so will the levels of congestion. In fact, traffic congestion has expanded beyond traditional peak travel periods into a problem that has the potential to disrupt travel and commerce drastically at any time throughout the day.
The continued growth in travel demand exceeds agencies' abilities to provide sufficient roadway capacity based on limited public funding for roadway expansion projects. High construction costs, constrained
rights-of-way, and environmental factors are pushing agencies to explore other alternatives, including managed lanes, to mitigate the detrimental effects of congestion while optimizing the use of limited public funding. The consideration and use
of managed lanes is growing rapidly
in major metropolitan areas as an
innovative and cost-effective approach
to address congestion within
urban freeway corridors.
"Managed lane strategies can
maximize existing capacity, manage
demand, offer choices, improve
safety, and generate revenue," says
State Traffic Engineer Carlos Lopez
from the Texas Department of Transportation (DOT). "The Texas DOT
believes that managed lanes leverage
existing capacity and move both
people and goods in the most efficient
manner possible."
The concept of managed lanes
involves proactively applying proven
operational strategies in response to
changing traffic and roadway conditions.
By actively managing and controlling
traffic though a combination
of access control, vehicle eligibility,
and pricing strategies, agencies can
keep vehicular demand and roadway
capacity in balance by taking the
appropriate actions before congestion
forms.
Defining Managed Lanes
Currently the concept or definition
of "managed lanes" varies from
agency to agency. To some, the
phrase refers only to high-occupancy
toll (HOT) lanes, which are facilities
that combine pricing and vehicle
eligibility to maintain free-flow conditions
while still providing a travel
time-savings incentive for high-occupant
vehicles. Other agencies use a
broader definition that may include
high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes,
priced lanes, HOT lanes, and special
use lanes (such as express, bus-only,
or truck-only lanes).
The Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) defines managed lanes
as highway facilities or a set of lanes
in which operational strategies are
implemented and managed (in real
time) in response to changing conditions.
Managed lanes are distinguished
from other traditional forms
of lane management strategies in that
they are proactively implemented,
managed, and may involve using
more than one operational strategy.
Traditionally, agencies have used
various lane management strategies
on freeway facilities—including reversible
flow lanes, express lanes,
HOV lanes, truck lanes, and toll facilities—in a manner that typically
does not involve any active management
or variation in how traffic is
controlled in response to changing
conditions. By comparison, possible
examples of managed lanes may
include the following: HOT lanes
with tolls that vary based on demand;
exclusive bus- and truck-only
lanes; HOV and clean air and/or
energy-efficient vehicle lanes; and
HOV lanes that could be changed
into HOT lanes in response to changing levels of traffic and roadway
conditions.
Assessing the Benefits
According to Ginger Goodin, with the Texas Transportation Institute and chair of the Transportation Research Board's (TRB) Joint Subcommittee on Managed Lanes, "If you subscribe to the notion that you cannot build your way out of congestion in developed urban freeway corridors, then managed lanes offer an opportunity to preserve a portion of the freeway capacity for a higher level of service. That capacity does not necessarily have to be used exclusively for personal automobile mobility but can be operated flexibly to incorporate transit and ridesharing options according to the needs and goals of the community."
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| The horizontal axis plots the lanes or managed lane facilities where one or several operational strategies are actively applied in response to changing roadway conditions. The lanes or facilities that apply only one operational strategy appear on the left half of the diagram, including value-priced and toll lanes, HOV lanes, and express lanes. HOT lanes, which involve both pricing and vehicle eligibility strategies, fall in the middle of the diagram. A managed lane, which involves the proactive (real-time) implementation and management of operational strategies in response to changing conditions, appears on the right half of the diagram. Source: FHWA/TRB Managed and Priced Lanes Workshop summary publication, FHWA and Transportation Research Board, Key Biscayne, FL, November 2003. |
Transportation agency experience
is beginning to show that managed
lanes help control demand; improve
the safety, mobility, and performance
of freeways and transit systems; and
offer travel options that save time
and enhance the reliability of travel
times. Revenue also may be generated
when one of the operational
strategies involves pricing, where a
toll is charged to a specific group of
vehicles that would not otherwise
have been eligible to use a managed
lane if it was being operated as only
an HOV lane.
Managed lanes offer the potential
to improve the range of benefits that
agencies typically realize from traditional
freeway management strategies.
According to FHWA's Freeway
Management and Operations Handbook
(FHWA-OP-04-003), traditional
freeway management strategies have
the potential to reduce travel times
up to 48 percent, increase travel
speeds up to 62 percent, increase
vehicle throughput on roadways up
to 25 percent, decrease crashes by
up to 50 percent, and reduce delay
caused by crashes that block traffic
by up to 50 percent. Managed lanes
also might improve the public perception
of how agencies manage the
operation of freeway facilities and attempt to mitigate the impacts of
congestion. A 2001 survey of I-15
users in San Diego showed that 92
percent of respondents agreed that
managed lanes on I-15 are an effective
time-saving option.
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| The San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) employs advanced signing to help motorists use the I-15 FasTrak lanes effectively. (Bottom) An overhead dynamic message sign alerts drivers to an exit for the FasTrak lanes. (Top) This sign displays the charge to use the facility. |
Improving the Operation Of Freeway Facilities
FHWA recommends implementing
the appropriate operational strategies,
control plans, and actions before
the flow of traffic breaks down.
The use of HOV lanes is one of the
proven and effective operational
strategies that agencies have implemented
to improve the performance
of freeway facilities.
Because HOV lanes carry vehicles
with a higher number of occupants,
they have the potential to move
more people in a smaller number of
vehicles, in comparison to the adjoining
general purpose travel lanes,
during congested travel periods. The
reversible-flow HOV lanes on I-95
in northern Virginia, for example,
demonstrate the potential to carry
a significantly larger number of
people in a smaller number of
vehicles. In the fall of 2003, the
Virginia DOT reported that during
the morning peak travel period
(6:00 to 9:00 a.m.), the HOV lanes
carry 54 percent of the total number
of people in 27 percent of the
total vehicles on only 40 percent of
the freeway lanes capacity (two
HOV lanes in comparison to three
general purpose lanes).
Similarly, commuters using HOV
lanes in Texas save an average of 2
to 18 minutes during the peak hour,
according to the Texas Transportation
Institute's ABCs of HOV: The
Texas Experience, Report 1353-I.
Benefit-cost ratios for HOV lanes in
Texas have been estimated to range
from 6:1 to 48:1, in comparison
with a base case involving the addition
of the same number of general
purpose lanes.
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| The figure depicts the potential impacts of raising or lowering the occupancy requirement on the utilization and performance of HOV lanes. These conditions can develop and evolve over time, or they may occur at any time when incidents temporarily increase traffic demand or reduce roadway capacity. (A) For many years after opening, an HOV lane will have significant excess capacity during peak periods. These "empty lanes," as perceived by the public, often exist side-by-side with congested general purpose traffic. (B) Growth in HOV traffic eventually overwhelms available capacity, and congestion in the HOV facility begins to degrade travel times. (C) To preserve travel times for transit, authorities must eliminate HOV-2 access to the facility, creating excess capacity that surpasses the amount of demand present when this operational change is implemented. Source: From Swisher, M., W. Eisele, D. Ungemah, and G. Goodin. "Life-Cycle Graphical Representation of Managed HOV Lane Evolution." In Transportation Research Record 1856, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council,
Washington, DC, 2003, Figures 1-2, p. 163. Reproduced with permission. |
HOV lanes may be warranted
outside the traditional peak commuting
periods to deliver travel-time
incentives to vehicles with more
than two occupants, whenever congestion
may occur along urban freeway
corridors. During offpeak travel
periods, the Washington State DOT
has found HOV lanes to be a viable
operational strategy. A study performed
in the Seattle area on weekend
use of HOV lanes showed that
the average number of people in
each car was higher than expected,
as 30 to 60 percent of the traffic
was eligible to use HOV lanes. The
DOT reported that when congestion
occurred during the weekends, more
vehicles used the HOV lanes.
The use of HOV lanes or occupancy
as the only operational strategy
may not be appropriate in every
location or for all time periods during
the day. Even after HOV lanes are
installed, changes may occur in land
use, the kinds of trips people take,
the times people travel, and the
levels of traffic congestion that may
exist along a freeway corridor. These
are changes that may warrant adjustments
in how an HOV lane may be
operated.
San Diego Supports HOT Lanes
A telephone survey of motorists using the I-15 "FasTrak" variable toll HOT lanes in
San Diego, CA, conducted during the summer and fall of 2001, revealed deep support for
the I-15 HOT lane, which allows single-occupant vehicles to pay a variable toll to use an
existing HOV lane. Both users and nonusers felt that the most effective way to reduce
existing and future congestion on I-15 was to add additional HOT lanes. Respondents
preferred this option over adding regular lanes—37 percent for HOT lanes versus
26 percent for regular lanes.
The study found that a large share of the public in San Diego has grown to understand
the value of priced and managed lanes, and that simply providing new general purpose
lanes, without fees or other restrictions, will not help much in relieving congestion due to
continuing increases in traffic. Other findings include the following:
- Overall support: 92 percent of respondents think it is a good idea to have a timesaving
option.
- Low-income motorist support: Although opponents repeatedly raised equity concerns,
in San Diego, nearly 80 percent of the lowest income users agree with the statement:
"People who drive alone should be able to use the I-15 Express lanes for a fee."
- Regular lane user support: Almost two-thirds of users who do not use the HOT lanes
also support the HOT lane program.
- Congestion reduction: 73 percent of nonusers agree that HOT lanes reduce congestion.
Extending HOT lanes was the top choice for reducing congestion.
- Support for extension: 89 percent of users support extending the HOT lanes.
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During peak travel periods in
many metropolitan areas, the HOV
lanes are already operating at or very
close to their maximum vehicle carrying
capacity. However, during other
times of the day, the opportunity
may exist for other types of vehicles
to use these lanes, based on the available
roadway capacity. The National
Research Council's HOV Systems
Manual (NCHRP Report 414) states
that HOV lanes are viable when the
HOV-eligible traffic ranges from 400
to 600 vehicles per hour. This is in
comparison to the maximum vehicle
carrying capacity of an HOV lane,
which may vary from 1,200 to 1,800
vehicles per hour per lane.
Historically agencies have had limited
options available to improve the
performance of HOV lanes. When the
demand to use HOV lanes exceeded
capacity, agencies traditionally either
expanded the number of lanes or
increased the occupancy level required
for vehicles to use the lanes to
maintain free flowing traffic conditions.
Raising the occupancy level
typically results in a significantly lower
number of vehicles eligible to use the
HOV lane, often resulting in a situation
where the public may view the facility
as underutilized. Agencies also have
had limited options when the demand
to use an HOV lane may be low. Managed
lanes, however, offer traffic managers
an opportunity to improve the
operational performance of HOV lanes
and proactively respond when they
are faced with similar situations.
Implementing Managed Lanes
One managed lane technique that agencies have implemented successfully to improve the performance of freeway facilities involves combining the use of tolls with vehicle occupancy requirements, in the form of a high-occupancy toll (HOT) lane. HOV lanes alone do not qualify as managed lanes, but when coupled with another operational strategy (such as pricing), or if real-time changes are made in their operation in response to changing conditions, then they would be considered a managed lane. As traffic and roadway
conditions change throughout
the day, agencies can modify the
occupancy level established for vehicles
to use a managed lane for free
along with the fee that is charged to
vehicles that would not otherwise
be able to use the HOT lane. These
decisions and operational changes
will directly influence travel demand
and performance on both the managed
lane and the adjoining general
purpose travel lanes.
The U.S. Department of Transportation's Value Pricing Pilot Program encourages the use of value pricing in the form of new tolls on existing toll-free facilities (such as HOT lanes), variable tolls on new lanes, variable tolls on toll facilities, and usage-based vehicle charges. "Value pricing is a way of harnessing the power of the market to reduce traffic congestion, improve the environment, and contribute toward the financing of transportation options," says Patrick DeCorla-Souza, team leader for the Highway Pricing and System Analysis Team with the FHWA Office of Transportation Policy Studies.
"The key to operating managed
lanes successfully is the ability to
alter the operation of the lanes in
ways that keep traffic flowing," adds
Lopez from the Texas DOT. "This
strategy provides flexibility, not only
in the day-to-day operation of the
lanes, but also in situations where
isolated incidents, such as major
crashes, call for the lanes to be open
to more or different user groups."
Examples of operational changes
agencies have made to maintain freeflow
travel conditions on managed
lanes while improving the overall
performance of the freeway facility
include the following:
- Varying the toll that motorists pay
to use an HOT lane if they do not
meet the minimum occupancy
requirement established for
vehicles that are allowed to use
the facility [lane] for free (State
Route 91, Orange County, CA)
- Raising the minimum vehicle
occupancy requirement from two
or more to three or more, while
allowing vehicles not meeting this
threshold to use the facility [lane]
if they pay a toll (I-10 Katy
Freeway, Houston, TX)
Another concept gaining interest
is the use of truck-only toll (TOT)
lanes, where tolls would be charged
to trucks choosing to use a lane or
facility that would be restricted to
other vehicles. These lanes would
enable shippers to stay on schedule,
reduce operating costs, bypass local
traffic, and meet freight deadlines.
The gains for the public might include
improved safety, ontime deliveries,
and less congestion.
Key Operational Aspects of Priced Lanes |
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Priced lanes on otherwise free facilities, including conversions
of HOV lanes and new priced lanes |
Variable tolls on toll facilities |
| How does it reduce congestion? |
Keeps traffic free flowing on the priced lanes, maintains high
vehicle throughput, and accommodates some traffic previously using
regular lane |
Shifts peak period travelers to other modes, routes, and times |
| What economic incentive is offered to change travel behavior? |
Prices change in the priced lanes to influence traveler choice
and keep demand within predetermined limits |
Offpeak toll discounts or higher peak tolls |
| What are the key observed travel impacts? |
In the peak hour, express lanes on State Route 91 in Orange County,
CA, carry twice as many vehicles per lane as the regular lanes,
and speed is 3 to 4 times faster |
4- to 7-percent reduction in peak period traffic observed in New
York; 71 percent of participants shifted time of travel to receive
the discount at least once a week in Florida |
The table summarizes the key operational aspects of pricing that FHWA identified from the value pricing projects implemented in the United States over the past decade. Source: Adapted from DeCorla-Souza, Patrick, "Recent U.S. Experience: Pilot Projects, "Road Pricing: Theory and Practice, Elsevier, Ltd., U.K., 2004. |
In a recent article, USA Today's
Debbie Howlett noted that "Texas,
Virginia, and California officials . . .
are looking at building TOT lanes on
major truck corridors in their States."
In addition, in the Atlanta Business
Chronicle's article, "Truck, 'HOT'
lanes might cool off traffic," Sarah
Rubenstein discusses Georgia's plan to
study the concept. "Not only is the
State Road and Tollway Authority
[Atlanta, GA] planning a study of potential
spots for HOT lanes, which
allow individual drivers to escape
congestion by paying tolls to use highoccupancy
vehicle (HOV) lanes, but
it's also considering a similar idea that
would specifically cater to trucks."
Experiences and Lessons Learned
The experiences and lessons
learned from the limited number
of managed lanes that have been
implemented represent a valuable
source of information, especially
because many of these concepts are
new in transportation applications.
The studies on these facilities, the
experiences that will be documented
by the FHWA Value Pricing
Pilot Program's upcoming report to
Congress (Report on the Value
Pricing Pilot Program, due spring
2005), and the results compiled
from a Managed and Priced Lanes
Workshop (FHWA and TRB, November
2003) provide answers and perspectives
where technical guidance
does not currently exist.
On State Route (SR) 91 in Orange
County, CA, four express lanes
(HOT) in the median of the 12-lane
freeway make use of occupancy and
variable pricing to ensure efficient
flow of traffic and to maximize vehicle
throughput and travel speeds.
In 2004, speeds on the SR-91 express
lanes traveled at 96 to 104
kilometers per hour, km/h (60 to 65
miles per hour, mi/h), while congestion
on the free lanes reduced average speeds during peak hours to no
more than 24 to 32 km/h (15 to 20
mi/h). As a testimony to the success
of this strategy, the share of vehicles
carried in the peak direction in the
peak hour of an average week on
the express lanes has increased to
49 percent. The two express lanes
each carry almost twice as many
vehicles per lane as the four adjoining
free lanes, and they do so at
three-to-four times the speed on the
unpriced lanes.
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| A motorist passes through an enforcement zone while heading westbound on the I-10 Katy Freeway in Houston, TX. |
San Diego, CA, also is using HOT lanes. The FHWA/TRB Managed and Priced Lanes Workshop summary publication states, "In San Diego, on the I-15 HOT lane facility prices can change as often as every 6 minutes, by as much as 25 (or 50) cents." According to Ray Traynor, senior project manager for the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG), 75 percent of the vehicles traveling in the I-15 HOT lanes (known locally as FasTrak lanes) still ride for free as HOVs, while 25 percent pay a toll. "The FasTrak lanes now yield about $2.2 million in annual collections revenue—enough to run the program
and pay for two Rapid Transit buses for the I-15 route, but not enough to float bonds to build new lanes," says Traynor.
Agencies should be aware of, consider, and prepare for the following key institutional, organizational, and technical issues that they may encounter throughout the key phases in the life cycle of a managed lane facility.
Institutional issues include the following:
- Understand equity concerns and seek political and public acceptance.
- Expand initial commitments to implement managed lanes to include the necessary resources to manage, operate, and enforce
the facilities.
- Consider the pros and cons of implementing managed lanes on new roadway capacity versus taking away existing general
purpose lanes.
- Recognize that the cost for new construction will be higher where space is not available in freeway medians.
- Support needed legislation, regulation, policies, and agency agreements.
- Recognize that the primary benefits from managed lane systems come from the integration of multiple strategies,
and in doing so may involve multiple agencies such as DOTs, transit agencies, and tolling authorities.
Case Study: State Route 91 Express (HOT) Lanes, Orange County, CA
- Four-lane toll facility constructed in median of existing freeway
- Painted buffer and plastic pylons separate the express or HOT lanes from the general
purpose lanes
- Ingress and egress limited to one entry and one exit point along 16-kilometer (10-mile) facility
Tolls vary based on congestion in general purpose lanes according to:
- Direction of travel
- Time of day and day of week
- Toll rates:
- $1.00 to $6.25 per trip
- Revenues exceed $29 million per year
- Vehicles with three or more persons:
- 50 percent discount when traveling eastbound from 4.6 p.m.
- Free all other times of day and week
- Performance during average weekly peak hour:
- Express lanes: 2 lanes carry 40 percent of traffic during peak periods at speeds of
104 kilometers per hour, km/h (65 miles per hour, mph)
- General purpose lanes: 4 lanes carry 60 percent of traffic during peak periods at
speeds of 16 to 32 km/h (10 to 20 mph)
- Performance during weekly peak hour (eastbound):
- Two HOT lanes carry 49 percent of traffic
- Four general purpose lanes carry 51 percent of traffic
- Peak hour, peak direction:
- Two HOT lanes carry 49 percent of traffic
- Four general purpose lanes carry 51 percent of traffic
- Express lane users must have an electronic transponder and prepaid account
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| The figure depicts the range of conditions and decisions that agencies may
face when they combine the use of occupancy and pricing. (A) Increasing use
by HOVs and transit over time yields less excess capacity for toll-paying singleoccupancy
vehicles (SOVs). (B) Eventually, SOVs will no longer be able to access
the lanes as long as the HOVs ride for free. Therefore, SOV buy-in ends. (C)
Over time, growth in HOVs and transit exceeds capacity. At that point,
agencies could implement tolls for HOV2s and SOVs to maintain free flow and
maximize use of the lanes. Source: From Swisher, M., W. Eisele, D. Ungemah, and G.
Goodin. "Life-Cycle Graphical Representation of Managed HOV Lane Evolution." In
Transportation Research Record 1856, Transportation Research Board, National Research
Council, Washington, DC, 2003, Figures 1-2, p. 163. Reproduced with permission. |
Organizational issues include the following:
- Identify managed lanes as a key
strategy and integrate them into
the appropriate agency and
regional strategic and program
plans, including statewide transportations
plans, regional transportations
plans (20-year plans for
metropolitan planning organizations),
long-range plans for
freeway network and transit
systems, corridor plans, and
facility improvement planning.
- Recognize opportunities to
implement managed lanes:
convert existing HOV lanes into
managed lanes (such as HOT
lanes) or integrate them into
roadway improvement projects.
- Provide necessary resources to
manage, operate, and enforce
lanes.
- Apply previous experience with
various operational strategies (like
ramp metering, HOV lanes, and pricing) toward successful
operation of managed lanes.
Technical issues include the
following:
- Consider the geometric design of
facilities and address safety concerns.
- Consider access to and egress
from managed lanes.
- Recognize that the limited
availability of space within the
majority of freeway rights-of-way
requires compromises to accommodate
managed lanes within
existing freeway cross sections.
- Plan enforcement strategies, such
as enabling legislation, policies,
and procedures; commit resources;
and automate procedures
for identifying the number of
people in vehicles.
- Plan and install appropriate
signage to ensure driver comprehension
and compliance.
- Develop effective marketing and
outreach strategies.
- Use traffic simulation tools to
analyze and evaluate the performance
of managed lanes.
- Analyze the effects of different
traffic management strategies and
control plans in evaluating the
performance of various operational
strategies that may used on
managed lanes.
- Install sufficient traffic management,
monitoring, and control
devices to enable agencies to
make real-time operational decisions,
and have the capability to
implement the necessary strategies
to manage the roadway network.
Case Study: I-15 "FasTrak" Priced Express Lanes, San Diego, CA
- Two-lane reversible flow barrier-separated lanes
- Converted HOV lanes into HOT lanes
- Ingress and egress limited to one entry and one exit point on 14-kilometer (8-mile) facility
- Tolls vary based on demand in HOT lanes:
- Fees typically vary in $0.25 increments but can increase or decrease as much as
$0.75 at a time, and as often as every 6 minutes, to help maintain free-flow traffic
conditions on the HOV lanes
- $0.50 to $8 per trip
- Vehicles with two or more occupants are free
- On average, 77 percent of daily users are HOVs and 23 percent pay a toll
- FasTrak users must have electronic transponders and prepaid account in order to use the
facility
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Keys to Success
FHWA expects that the number of
managed lane facilities in operation will increase significantly in the
coming years, as agencies begin
implementing new projects based
on commitments associated with
feasibility studies already completed.
These new managed lanes will represent
a combination of new or
reconstructed facilities as well as
changes in the ways roadway owners
manage the operation of existing
facilities (such as converting HOV
lanes to HOT lanes). Agencies have
identified the following as key factors
that have contributed to the
success of the managed lane facilities
that they have planned, designed,
or are currently operating:
- Consider managed lanes a "freeway-
within-a-freeway" facility
where they are physically separated
from general purpose lanes
within the freeway cross section.
- Design flexibility into the facilities
to accommodate future changes
in operational strategies.
- Remember that managed lanes
are justifiable 24 hours a day and
7 days a week; they should not be
limited to operation only during
peak commuting periods when
recurring congestion typically
occurs.
- Recognize that the integrity of
the managed lane approach relies
on establishing and maintaining
the legislation, policies, interagency
agreements, procedures,
protocols, control plans, intelligent
transportation systems (ITS),
and support services (such as
enforcement and traffic management)
required to sustain day-today
operation.
- Do not confuse managed lanes
with toll facilities, where the
primary objective may be revenue
generation at the expense of
mobility.
Online Resources for More Information
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Moving Forward
Managing and controlling traffic on
dual or separate roadways that are
interconnected on the same freeway
facility presents new challenges for
agencies to address and overcome in
the planning, design, implementation,
enforcement, and evaluation of
managed lane facilities and the strategies
used to operate them. Although
many of these challenges
appear to be similar to what agencies
may have encountered previously
with HOV lanes, managed
lanes present many new and complex
issues that will require information
and answers.
"The Texas DOT embraced the
idea of managed lanes in its congested
urban freeway corridors
but also recognizes that the idea is
more than a concept," says Goodin
from the Texas Transportation Institute.
"There are practical implementation
issues that need to be addressed.
Although frequently cited
examples of managed lanes, such as
California's I-15 and State Route 91,
are models of successful projects,
they are somewhat simplistic in
their operating approach. The next
generation of projects under development
in Texas and elsewhere are
more complex in terms of ingress/
egress locations, access treatment,
enforcement, and transit integration."
Currently underway, the following
key activities are beginning to identify
and deliver the research results
and technology transfer products
that practitioners will need to consider,
implement, and utilize managed
lanes successfully:
- FHWA initiated a cross-cutting study and primer summarizing the current developments, benefits, and lessons learned from managed lane projects around the country. These products will be available on the FHWA "Managed Lanes Initiative" Web site (http://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/freewaymgmt/index.htm) in early 2005.
- TRB formed a Joint Subcommittee
on Managed Lanes in the summer
of 2004 to facilitate identifying
research and technology transfer
needs for managed lanes.
- TRB, FHWA, and others are
planning a conference for the
spring of 2005 in Houston, TX,
to advance the state of the art
related to HOV systems, managed
lanes, and pricing strategies.
Conference proceedings will be
available in the fall of 2005.
- FHWA initiated work that will be
available in early 2006, including
the following: (1) Identifying the
driver information needs and
recommendations for sign
sequencing and placement, and
determining revisions to the
Manual on Uniform Traffic
Control Devices and research
needs to support the signing for
managed lanes. (2) Compiling the
current practices and lessons that
agencies have learned from
managing and controlling traffic
on managed lanes. (3) Identifying
the current practices and lessons
learned in the managed lane
development process. (4) Highlighting
current practices and
lessons learned in planning for
managed lanes.
- Texas DOT is advancing research
on a number of different issues
related to managed lanes, including
planning, design, and operations.
(http://managed-lanes.tamu.edu)
 |
| Adjustable overhead signage enables the New Jersey Turnpike Authority to
change the types of vehicles that may use different sections of the barrierseparate
freeway (shown here) based on traffic and roadway conditions. |
"Managed lanes will play an increasingly
important role in congested
corridors. Encouraging and
supporting the successful planning,
implementation, and operation of
managed lanes will require the collective
support of professional organizations,
in addition to FHWA," says
Associate Administrator of Operations
Jeff Paniati at FHWA. "A new
focus on research, technical guidance,
training, technology transfer,
and outreach is needed to increase
awareness of the potential benefits
that managed lanes have to offer and
to advance their use."
Managed lanes provide the opportunity
to manage and control traffic
proactively, in response to changing
traffic and roadway conditions on
freeway facilities. For that reason,
they are a key strategy that agencies
and highway officials can use to
improve safety and mitigate the impacts
of congestion efficiently and
effectively. Although some applications
of managed lanes are more
developed than others, as the transportation
community finds new
ways to combine various lane strategies,
more innovations are likely to
surface in the future.
Jon T. Obenberger, P.E. is the
team leader for the Preconstruction
Group within the FHWA Office of
Infrastructure. Prior to this appointment,
he served as manager of the
freeway management program located
in the Office of Transportation
Management within the FHWA Office
of Operations. In that capacity,
he focused on freeway management
systems, traffic management systems,
and high-occupancy vehicle and
managed lane systems.
The author would like to express his
appreciation to the following individuals
who provided insight, guidance,
and valuable perspectives on
the issues and topics in this article:
Patrick DeCorla-Souza, leader of
the Highway Pricing and System
Analysis Team, FHWA Office of
Transportation Policy Studies; and
Jeffrey A. Lindley, Director of the
Office of Transportation Management,
FHWA Office of Operations.
For more information on managed lanes, contact Jon T. Obenberger at 202-366-2221 or jon.obenberger@fhwa.dot.gov.
Other Articles in this issue:
Operational Solutions to Traffic Congestion
Regional Collaboration to Improve Safety, Reliability, and
Security
Traffic Incident Management
Work Zones That Work
Another Rain Delay
Putting Travelers in the Know
Red Light, Green Light
Managed Lanes
Reliability: Critical to Freight Transportation