continued - ASCE International Conference on Transportation
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continued - ASCE International Conference on Transportation
FINAL PROGRAM INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TRANSPORTATION & DEVELOPMENT 2016 Houston, Texas | June 26-29, 2016 A Conference of the Transportation & Development Institute (T&DI) of ASCE Projects and Practices for Prosperity 24 Omni Houston Galleria Hotel #TranspConf16 | www.asce-ictd.org Schedule-At-A-Glance CONTENTS Schedule at a Glance 2 Welcome to Houston 3 Pre-Conference Events 4 Conference Agenda 5-8 Technical Tours 9-10 Technical Program 11-15 Poster Displays 16 General Information 17 Exhibitors18 Cooperating Organizations 19 Sponsors20 (Subject to Change) Sunday, June 26 8:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. Committee Meetings 8:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. Registration 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Envision Credential Workshop 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Pre-Conference Event: TransportationCamp Texas 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Short Course: Updates to 2010 Highway Capacity Manual (HCM) 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Exhibitor Move-in 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. Welcome Reception in Exhibit Hall Monday, June 27 8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. 8:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. 8:30 – 10:15 a.m. 10:15 – 10:45 a.m. 10:45 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. Registration Continental Breakfast in Exhibit Hall Exhibit Hall Open Plenary Session Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Plenary Session Lunch & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. Concurrent Technical Sessions 3:30 – 4:00 p.m. Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 4:00 – 5:30 p.m. Concurrent Technical Sessions Tuesday, June 28 7:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. 8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. 8:30 – 10:00 a.m. 10:00 – 10:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. 12:00 – 1:30 p.m. Registration Continental Breakfast & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Exhibit Hall Open Concurrent Technical Sessions Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Concurrent Technical Sessions Awards Lunch & Lecture 1:30 – 3:00 p.m. Concurrent Technical Sessions 3:00 – 3:30 p.m. Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 3:30 – 5:00 p.m. Concurrent Technical Sessions 3:45 – 8:00 p.m. Exhibitor Move-out 5:45 – 6:45 p.m. Younger Member Session 6:45 – 7:45 p.m. Younger Member Social Hour Wednesday, June 29 7:30 – 11:00 a.m. 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. 8:30 – 10:00 a.m. 10:00 – 10:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. 2 Projects and Practices for Prosperity Registration Continental Breakfast Concurrent Technical Sessions Networking Break Concurrent Technical Sessions Technical Tours Welcome to Houston Howdy y’all, welcome to Houston, Texas. On behalf of the Transportation and Development Institute (T&DI) of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), it is our pleasure to welcome you to the ASCE International Conference on Transportation & Development 2016. The theme of this year’s conference is “Projects and Practices for Prosperity”. The International Conference on Transportation and Development (ICTD 2016) serves as a synergistic opportunity to bring together academics, consultants, government representatives, and contractors from around the world to discuss critical transportation needs and solutions. The demand for infrastructure improvement helps drive investment and development decisions. As communities grow, the needs for transportation, utility delivery services, and sustainable development practices increase. Additionally, transportation professionals must address these needs while considering funding challenges, natural resource constraints, and environmental protection. During this week at ICTD, you will be able to explore new technologies and creative financing of capital investment to move people and goods safely, efficiently, and with minimal environmental impact. The Conference Steering Committee has worked hard over the last two years to make ICTD 2016 the premier conference venue for transportation and development professionals. You will be attending sessions this week during ICTD that will showcase technologies that transportation and development professionals will be implementing in the near future. In addition to future transportation concepts, conference sessions include many case study presentations highlighting lessons learned during many large-scale transportation projects. This week’s program includes five concurrent technical tracks, two workshops, and three technical tours to enable you as an attendee to earn up to 24 professional development hours (PDHs) towards your Professional Engineering licensure. In addition to participating in sessions under five technical tracks, you will have the opportunity to review poster displays. The ICTD begins on Monday with seven outstanding plenary speakers addressing topics of interest to the many specialties represented by conference attendees. Technical sessions begin on Monday afternoon and run through Wednesday morning. The sessions cover the various transportation and development modes related to design, rehabilitation, sustainability, construction, operation and emerging technologies. On Wednesday afternoon, you will have the option of choosing from three technical tours: George Bush Intercontinental Airport, the Transtar Traffic Operation Center, and the Uptown Management District. So enjoy your week here at ICTD 2016 as an attendee, presenter, exhibitor, sponsor, or cooperating organization. On behalf of the conference Steering Committee, we look forward to meeting all y’all and giving you a Howdy welcome to Houston, TX at ICTD 2016. CO-CHAIRS Geoff Baskir, C.M., AICP, M.ASCE, General Engineer Ernie Heymsfield, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, University of Arkansas Visit www.asce-ictd.org STEERING COMMITTEE CO-CHAIRS Geoff Baskir, C.M., AICP, M.ASCE, General Engineer Ernie Heymsfield, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, University of Arkansas TECHNICAL EDITOR Kelvin C.P. Wang, Ph.D., P.E., M.ASCE, Oklahoma State University TRACK CHAIRS Jeffrey D. Borowiec, Ph.D., T exas A&M Transportation Institute (Roadways Track) Lenor M. Bromberg, P.E., M.ASCE, C ity of Roswell, Georgia (Development Track) Michael J. Loehr, P.E., M.ASCE, C H2M Hill (Rail and Transit Track) Loy F. Warren III, P.E., M.ASCE, K imleyHorn Associates (Aviation & Aerospace Track) Zhanmin Zhang, Ph.D., A.M.ASCE, University of Texas at Austin (CrossCutting Themes Track) PAST CHAIRS Brian McKeehan, P.E., F.ASCE, G resham, Smith, and Partners Bob Bryson, P.E., M.ASCE, R etired, City of Milwaukee ICTD EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Imad L. Al-Qadi, Ph.D., P.E., Dist.M.ASCE, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Marsha Anderson Bomar, M.ASCE, FITE, AICP, ENV SP, G winnett Village Community Improvement District D. Wayne Klotz, P.E., D.WRE, Pres.09. ASCE, ENV SP, K lotz Associates Scott D. Murrell, P.E., M.ASCE, Applied Research Associates C. Michael Walton, Ph.D., P.E., Dist.M.ASCE, U niversity of Texas at Austin Wanming Zhai, Ph.D., S outhwest Jiaotong University, China; Member, Chinese Academy of Sciences 3 Pre-Conference Events Short Course: Updates to 2010 Highway Capacity Manual (HCM) SUNDAY | JUNE 26 1:00 – 5:00 p.m., Windsor Salon Envision Credential Workshop 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., Regent Salon Envision provides a holistic framework for planning, evaluating and rating the community, environmental, and economic benefits of all types and sizes of infrastructure projects. It provides specific metrics to allow the evaluation, grading, and development of recognition for infrastructure projects. It encourages transformational, collaborative approaches and assesses the sustainability indicators over the course of the project’s life cycle. T&DI is hosting a full-day workshop that will equip participants to take the Envision Sustainability Professional (ENV SP) accreditation exam. The workshop will include a mix of presentations, case studies, and group exercises delivered by an ISI-approved trainer. Participants will learn how to use the Envision rating system to aid in sustainable planning and design. Instructor: M arsha Anderson Bomar, M.ASCE, FITE, AICP, ENV SP, Executive Director, Gwinnett Village Community Improvement District Marsha Anderson Bomar is the executive director of Gwinnett Village Community Improvement District. She brings 40 years of leadership in transportation and community development and is a certified planner and Envision™ certified sustainability professional. Bomar was the first female international president of the Institute of Transportation Engineers, served as president of the Transportation and Development Institute of the American Society of Civil Engineers and is vice chair of the Committee on Critical Infrastructure. She is passionate about the relationship between transportation and land use; her experience in many modes including truck, rail, transit, bicycling, walking and general transportation give her a broad perspective on options for moving people and goods. She also chairs a Transportation Research Board committee on Women’s Issues in Transportation and is author of the Urban Travel Characteristics chapter of the Transportation Planners Handbook. Bomar is a frequent speaker on the national level on sustainability and resiliency of infrastructure and communities. She recently completed the Livable Centers Plan for the Six Flags Community (GA) to create a roadmap for the sustainable revitalization of a once vibrant area. PDHs earned: 6 TRB recently released the most recent version of the Highway Capacity Manual, now referred to as Highway Capacity Manual, 6th Edition: A Guide for Multimodal Mobility Analysis. This short course will provide an overview of the key changes and updates made since the HCM 2010 was published, including the addition of travel time reliability methods for urban streets and freeways, updated roundabout capacity models, the inclusion of an alternative intersection evaluation methodology, and expanded consideration of freight vehicles, and much more. Instructor: Bastian Schroeder, Ph.D., P rincipal Engineer, Kittelson and Associates, Inc. Bastian Schroeder is principal engineer with Kittelson and Associates, Inc. in Wilmington, NC. Schroeder has more than 10 years of professional experience focusing on research and technology transfer in transportation engineering. He has been centrally involved in the production of the 5th and 6th Editions of the HCM, with a primary focus on the freeway and interchange methodologies, as well as review and support roles for various interrupted flow chapters. He has served as principal investigator or Co-PI on over 22 funded projects, for sponsors including FHWA, NCHRP, SHRP2, ITE, NCDOT, and others. Schroeder has authored or co-authored more than 31 peer-reviewed journal articles, and 32 peer-reviewed conference proceedings, and has given numerous presentations at state, national, and international conferences. He is a member of the TRB Committee on Highway Capacity and Quality of Service, the TRB Committee on Roundabouts, the TRB Simulation Task Force, and chairs the North Carolina Simulation and Capacity Model users Group (SimCap) for ITE. PDHs earned: 3.5 Registration Fee: ONS: $195/$220 (Member/Non-Member) Committee Meetings Attend the semi-annual meetings of the following committees to learn more about their exciting activities. Regency Ballroom G 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Permeable Pavements Standard Committee Registration Fee: Member Non-Member Private Sector $380 ONS $410 ONS Public Sector, Non-Profit & Faculty $280 ONS $310 ONS Full-Time Student $230 ONS $260 ONS Regency Ballroom E 9:30 – 11:00 a.m. T&DI Freight and Logistics Committee (F&L) 11:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. T&DI Street and Highway Operations Committee (SHOC) 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. TRB Aircraft/Airport Compatibility Committee (AV070) 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. T&DI Highway Pavement Committee (HPC) 3:30 – 5:00 p.m. T&DI Airfield Pavement Committee (APC) 4 Projects and Practices for Prosperity Conference Agenda TransportationCamp Texas 2016 TransportationCamp Texas 2016, a partnership with the American Society of Civil Engineers and the Houston and Austin Chapters of the Young Professionals in Transportation (YPT), aims to bring together diverse views and perspectives on pressing transportation issues in Texas. By hosting TransportationCamp at ICTD, YPT, and ASCE are helping to create a unique TransportationCamp atmosphere, where technologists, transportation advocates, and users can come together in open conversation with the operators of Texas’ transportation providers. Sunday, June 26 What is an Unconference? 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Registration Fee: $25 Morning Coffee will be included in the registration fee of $25, but guests will be expected to provide their own lunch. Though it will take place during a conference, the event will be run as a standard “unconference” — sessions will be proposed on the day of the event and will range in transportation topics based on the interest of the attendees. TransportationCamp Texas will be held as an unconference — a loosely structured conference emphasizing the informal exchange of information and ideas between participants, rather than following a conventionally structured program of events. Typically at an unconference, the agenda is created by the attendees at the beginning of the meeting. Anyone who wants to initiate a discussion on a topic can claim a time and a space. Unconferences typically feature open discussions rather than having a single speaker at the front of the room giving a talk, although any format is permitted. It is an exciting new way to engage in a group discussion, exchange great ideas, and learn from your peers. TransportationCamp 2016 will begin in the Colonnade Salon B & Preassembly. SUNDAY | JUNE 26 Welcome Reception 6:00 – 7:30 p.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD This is a great forum to network, mingle with friends and colleagues, and visit with exhibitors. Don’t miss the Welcome Reception and kick off your conference experience in a fun, relaxed environment. Included in Full Registration Packages. Additional Ticket Fee: ONS $75 MONDAY | JUNE 27 Continental Breakfast 8:00 – 8:30 a.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD Sponsored by Plenary Session 8:30 – 10:15 a.m., Grand Salon & Preassembly Welcome Remarks Robert D. Stevens, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, 2015 President, ASCE Keynote Address Sylvester Turner, Mayor, City of Houston Sylvester Turner was elected Mayor of Houston on December 12, 2015, to serve a four year term beginning January 4, 2016. He was born and raised in the Acres Homes community in northwest Houston. Sylvester’s mother worked as a maid in the old Rice Hotel in Houston. His father was a painter for Continental Ensco and cut yards with his sons on the weekends to make extra money. The Turners raised nine children in their modest two-bedroom home. Sylvester lost his father to cancer when he was 13. Afterward, his mother took over the Turner household. Although she never finished high school or learned to drive, she ensured her children got an education and inspired them to achieve. Sylvester attended neighborhood public schools until forced integration came to Houston, and he was bused to Klein High School. After a predictably rocky start, the student body adapted to its new enrollees. Sylvester was later elected student body president and graduated as valedictorian. Sylvester graduated from the University of Houston and Harvard Law School before joining the law firm of Fulbright & Jaworski. He later founded the Houston law firm of Barnes & Turner in 1983. In 1988, Sylvester was elected to the Texas House of Representatives to serve the people of House District 139 in Northwest Houston. He served until his election as mayor, working on the House Appropriations Committee for 21 years and serving as Speaker Pro Tem for three terms. He was appointed to several Budget Conference Committees to help balance the state’s budget and served on the Legislative Budget Board. Visit www.asce-ictd.org 5 Conference Agenda (continued) MONDAY | JUNE 27 (Continued) Networking Break & Poster Displays 10:15 – 10:45 a.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD Keynote Address: The Strategic Initiatives for Addressing the Mobility Needs of Texas Plenary Session Marc D. Williams, P.E., D eputy Executive Director, Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) Keynote Address: Marc Williams serves as deputy executive director of the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT). In this role he supports the executive director with executive control and oversight of TxDOT operations and the management and operation of the state’s transportation system. These responsibilities include the development and administration of policies, programs and operating strategies for TxDOT. He is charged with ensuring Texas’ transportation system is constructed and maintained in the most cost-effective manner and address the state’s growing safety, mobility and reliability needs. Williams’ career experience in transportation planning and program efforts includes public- and private-sector organizations involving state, county and local jurisdictions. He has served in leadership positions with two state departments of transportation and has worked with national, private-sector transportation engineering organizations. His professional assignments have included directing statewide transportation planning and programming efforts as well as managing project-specific highway and multimodal transportation plans and programs. He has worked extensively with public and agency outreach, transportation plans of various modes, regional and corridor-level plans and programs, environmental planning and approval, economics and finance, project design and development, along with work in the areas of construction management, operations and maintenance. 10:45 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., Grand Salon & Preassembly Ed Emmett, Harris County Judge Edward M. Emmett became Harris County Judge on March 6, 2007, presiding over a Board of Commissioners for the third most populous county in the United States. A member of the Texas House of Representatives from 1979 to 1987, Emmett was chairman of the Committee on Energy, a member of the Transportation Committee, and represented the state on numerous national committees relating to energy and transportation policy. In 1989, President George H. W. Bush nominated Emmett as a commissioner at the Interstate Commerce Commission. After being confirmed unanimously by the U.S. Senate, Emmett served on the commission for three years. He has received international recognition for his work in transportation and logistics policy. Among his many other activities, Emmett is director of Harris County’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, chairman of the Harris County Juvenile Board, and chairman of the Conference of Urban Counties Policy Committee. He graduated from Rice University in 1971 with a Bachelor of Arts in Economics and from the University of Texas at Austin in 1974 with a Master of Public Affairs. Keynote Address: Envisioning the Future of Sustainable Development Keynote Address: Technological Challenges in Rapid Development of High-Speed Railways in China Denise Nelson, P.E., ENV SP, LEED AP, V ice President, Institute of Sustainable Infrastructure Wanming Zhai, S outhwest Jiaotong University, Chinese National Academy of Sciences The future of development projects depends on the adoption of sustainable best practices that address the triple bottom line to result in the best return on investment and useful life. Guidance on best practices and metrics for tracking performance are being tested, and from the lessons learned on successful projects, we can envision the future of sustainable development. Professor Wanming Zhai graduated from Southwest Jiaotong University with a B.S. degree in 1985 and received his Ph.D. in Railway Vehicle Engineering in 1992. He became a full professor in 1994. In 1999 he was appointed Chang Jiang Chair Professor by the Chinese Ministry of Education. Zhai was elected a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2011. Currently, he is the chairman of Academic Committee of Southwest Jiaotong University, the director of the Train and Track Research Institute, and the editor-in-chief of International Journal of Rail Transportation. He also serves as the president of Chengdu Association for Science and Technology, the vice president of the Chinese Society of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, and the vice president of the Chinese Society for Vibration Engineering. Zhai developed a framework of vehicle-track coupled dynamics and a method for analyzing and assessing the running safety of high-speed trains passing through bridges based on train-track-bridge dynamic interactions, both of which have been widely cited and successfully applied to more than 20 large-scale field engineering projects for the railway network in China, mostly for high-speed railways. 6 Projects and Practices for Prosperity Denise Nelson is the vice president for public education at the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure. Her responsibilities include education and training for both public and private sector organizations and overall coordination of messaging and promotions related to Envision, the guidance and rating system for sustainable infrastructure that creates public confidence in the process of civil infrastructure development. Nelson received her Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Virginia Tech and her Master of Science in Environmental Engineering from the University of Cincinnati. She is a licensed engineer with more than12 years of experience. Conference Agenda Keynote Address: State of the Houston Airports Lunch & Poster Displays Robert Barker, C hief Development Officer, Infrastructure, Houston Airport System 12:30 – 2:00 p.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD Robert Barker is the chief development officer of the Infrastructure Division for the Houston Airport System (HAS). He is responsible for overseeing the administration of planning, design, construction, and asset management contracts, managing long-term and short-term airport projects including the George Bush Intercontinental Airport Terminal Redevelopment Program (ITRP), analyzing operations and implementing best management practice policies and procedures to effectively manage the life cycle of infrastructure assets at HAS. A retired U.S. Navy engineering officer and certified facility manager, Barker has more than 20 years international airport development, infrastructure, and asset management experience. Concurrent Technical Sessions (continued) 2:00 – 3:30 p.m., See pages 11-15 Networking Break & Poster Displays 3:30 – 4:00 p.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD Concurrent Technical Sessions 4:00 – 5:30 p.m., See pages 11-15 Shanghai Maglev Train. Photo: Andreas Krebs (Picture-4) via Wikimedia Commons Barker previously served as HAS deputy director for capital programs. Prior to that he was the executive representative for ITRP and the assistant director for asset management. He joined HAS in November 2012. His previous work assignments have included asset management leadership positions at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport and the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, and in a variety of consulting engagements at Los Angeles International Airport, Indianapolis International Airport, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Northwest Florida Regional Airport and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. During his Navy career, Barker served in a variety of positions, including as chief engineer aboard three Navy combatant ships. Keynote Address: Update & Opportunity: Developing Texas Central’s High Speed Rail (HSR) Shaun McCabe, Texas Central Railway Texas Central will provide an update on its development of the first private HSR initiative. As the environmental clearance process moves closer to a decision, Texas Central will discuss those opportunities the project continues to work through in the development of this transformational project. Shaun McCabe is an executive manager, attorney and environmental specialist with more than 25 years of experience in the energy and environmental sector. He has served as president and led a turnaround of a Texas-based materials management and disposal company, successfully advocated for changes to state legislation, obtained multi-state and federal agency approvals, licenses, and permits and led large capital expenditure environmental-related projects for Texas Central Railway. The Mississippi River Bridge in Helena, Arkansas. Photo courtesy of the Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department. Visit www.asce-ictd.org 7 Conference Agenda (continued) TUESDAY | JUNE 28 Continental Breakfast & Poster Displays 8:00 – 8:30 a.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD Concurrent Technical Sessions 8:30 – 10:00 a.m., See pages 11-15 for a major component of the $30 million Asphalt Research Consortium project. He has served as consultant on a number of key national and international projects including the Denver Airport design and construction; advancement in chemical soil stabilization technology in Australia and New Zealand; multi-billion dollar design-build highway projects in Texas; the new Doha, Qatar, Airport; the planned Bahrain to Qatar Causeway; and the planned new Mexico City Airport. He has been honored by ASCE in 2016 with both the Francis C. Turner and Monismith Lecture Awards. Concurrent Technical Sessions Networking Break & Poster Displays 1:30 – 3:00 p.m., See pages 11-15 10:00 – 10:30 a.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Concurrent Technical Sessions 3:00 – 3:30 p.m., Regency Ballroom ABCD 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m., See pages 11-15 Francis C. Turner Lecture and Awards Luncheon 12:00 – 1:30 p.m., Grand Salon Concurrent Technical Sessions 3:30 – 5:00 p.m., See pages 11-15 YOUNGER MEMBER ACTIVITIES Welcome Remarks Lenor M. Bromberg, P.E., M.ASCE, T &DI President Younger Member Session: What I Wish I Knew 5:45 – 6:45 p.m., Churchill Salon Moderators: Katherine Kortum, Ph.D., P.E., M.ASCE, Transportation Research Board Panelists: J effrey D. Borowiec, Ph.D., Texas A&M Transportation Institute; ssistant Vice President, Kimley-Horn, Puerto Rico LLC, Eileen Velez-Vega, P.E., A Gareth J. Young, P.E., P roject Manager, Gulf Interstate Engineering, and S cott D. Murrell, P.E., P rincipal Civil Engineer, Director, Commercial Airport Services, ARA Dallas N. Little, Ph.D., P.E. Shiraz Tayabji, Ph.D., P.E. George Nowak, P. Eng. The following awards will be presented over a seated lunch event in the main ballroom: ■■ Francis C. Turner Award: Dallas N. Little, Ph.D., P.E., Dist.M.ASCE, Regents Professor, E.B. Snead Chair Professor of Civil Engineering, Texas A&M University ■■ Wilbur S. Smith Award: Shiraz Tayabji, Ph.D., P.E., M.ASCE, Senior Principal Engineer, Applied Research Associates ■■ Airfield Pavement Practitioner Award: George Nowak, P. Eng., M.ASCE, Deputy Practice Manager, Hatch ■■ Francis C. Turner Lecture Francis C. Turner lecture will be given by the Francis C. Turner award recipient, Dallas N. Little, Ph.D., P.E., Dist.M.ASCE. The title of his lecture is Two Practical Applications of Chemo-Mechanics to Extend the Life of Our Asphalt Pavement Infrastructure. Dallas Little is Regents Professor and E.B. Snead Chair Professor in the Zachry Department of Civil Engineering at Texas A&M University. He is senior research fellow for the Texas A&M Transportation Institute and a distinguished member of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Little has published extensively in refereed journals, has presented more than 450 invited lectures, and serves as honorary professor or adjunct professor at three international universities. He recently served as principle investigator 8 Projects and Practices for Prosperity Unwritten rules, hard won knowledge through mistakes, and general career advice are things that leaders and respected veterans of civil engineering have earned, and things our younger members need! Come hear a panel discussion on this topic as experienced leaders of the field pass on their hard-won advice to the younger members. Younger Member Social Hour 6:45 – 7:45 p.m., Palm Court Come network with leaders in the civil engineering field. The event allows younger members an opportunity to speak directly with company leaders, academic administrators, and other “movers and shakers” in the transportation field. WEDNESDAY | JUNE 29 Continental Breakfast 8:00 – 8:30 a.m., Colonnade Preassembly Concurrent Technical Sessions 8:30 – 10:00 a.m., See pages 11-15 Networking Break 10:00 – 10:30 a.m., Colonnade Preassembly Concurrent Technical Sessions 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m., See pages 11-15 Technical Tours 1:00 – 5:00 p.m., See listing on pages 9-10. Technical Tours TranStar Traffic Operation Center Tour Houston TranStar Technical Tour Wednesday, June 29, 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. The Houston Transtar consortium is a partnership of four government agencies that are responsible for providing Transportation Management and Emergency Management services to the Greater Houston Region. ICTD registrants for the Houston TranStar technical tour will have an opportunity to see both the Traffic Management Center and the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) during their visit. The Traffic Management Center is a key focus of the tour where guests will view the staff as they manage state-of-the-art technologies to reduce congestion on major roadways, including more than 900 regional Closed Circuit Television Cameras, Dynamic Message Signs (DMS), synchronized traffic signals, speed sensors, ramp meters and other devices. If EOC operation conditions permit, guests will also be able to see the Emergency Operations Center. During emergencies, the center fills with representatives from the four collaborating agencies—as well as such diverse entities as the U.S. Army, Salvation Army, Harris County Toll Road Authority, Amateur Radio Operator volunteers, the American Red Cross, and area local governments—to coordinate a quick, effective response. ICTD guests will have a first-hand opportunity to observe and learn from the innovative technologies being employed in the Houston region to manage both traffic and emergency operations. Guests will be accompanied by experienced TranStar staff members who will be available to answer their questions. PDHs earned: 3 Registration Fee: ONS: $55/$65 (Member/Non-Member) A box lunch will be provided. Sponsored by Visit www.asce-ictd.org 9 Technical Tours George Bush Intercontinental Airport Tour: New Terminal C North project – George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) Wednesday, June 29, 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. The $244 million project will create a 265,000-square-foot facility, more than 100,000 square feet larger than the existing Terminal C North, with 11 passenger boarding gates to accommodate a mix of United’s narrow-, mid- and wide-body aircraft. When construction on the new concourse is completed, the Houston Airport System will demolish the existing Terminal C North facility at Bush Intercontinental to enable the reconstruction of the Mickey Leland International Terminal D. The international terminal is critical to Bush Intercontinental’s extensive connecting air traffic, particularly for those customers connecting between United flights and flights operated by United’s international airline partners. The tour will include a presentation on the redevelopment of the international terminal. Reconstruction of Terminal C is a prerequisite under the facility master plan for the international terminal that permits Terminal D to be redeveloped. The expansion will provide additional gates, make Terminals C and D a single linked facility and provide additional positions for the Airbus A380 and Boeing 747-8. Houston is one of the few airports that sees regular service from the most commonly operated Group VI aircraft – the Antonov AN-124, the Airbus A380 and the Boeing B747-8. Project Team: Owner: United Airlines Program managers: Faithful+Gould, VRX, Inc. Designers: PGAL, AECOM Construction Manager at Risk (CMAR): Manhattan Construction PDHs earned: 2.5 Registration Fee: ONS: $55/$65 (Member/Non-Member) A box lunch will be provided. Sponsored by Houston Uptown Management District Tour Wednesday, June 29, 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Uptown Houston has distinguished itself as the city’s elite destination for fashion. It is the shopping mecca of the Southwest. Each year, more than 26 million people from near and far are drawn to the exquisite collection of stores at The Galleria, the fourth largest retail complex in the United States, and to the beauty of Uptown Park, a European-styled retail center whose elegant shops exude Old World charm. In addition, hundreds of other specialty shops, boutiques and restaurants are sprinkled throughout the area, offering shoppers an assortment of options including the new BLVD Place, Centre at Post Oak and Post Oak Shopping Center. With more than 28 million square feet of commercial office space and five million square feet of retail space combined with nearly 7,600 hotel rooms, more than 100 restaurants and a booming residential market, Uptown Houston is... Where You Can Have It All. As one of the world’s leading urban districts, Uptown Houston is poised to become even greater than the prestigious blend of commercial and residential properties that it is today. Through a series of improvement initiatives, 10 Uptown Houston is implementing a strategic vision which will ensure its continued success. ICTD registrants for the Uptown Houston District tour will begin their tour with a presentation reviewing the recent considerable development occurring in the Houston business district. Along with this growing development, transportation demands have significantly increased. The tour presentation will include how the Houston Galveston Area Council’s (H-GAC) Transportation Policy Council took first steps in meeting this need by approving a transportation improvement program that includes the politically controversial Uptown Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line. After the presentation, tour attendees will participate on a walking tour of the area highlighting the area’s recent development and proposed transportation system. PDHs earned: 3 Registration Fee: ONS: $55/$65 (Member/Non-Member) A box lunch will be provided. Sponsored by Projects and Practices for Prosperity Photo: Postoak at English Wikipedia Technical Program SUNDAY, June 26 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Envision Credential Workshop, Regent Salon Instructor: Marsha Anderson Bomar, M.ASCE, FITE, AICP, ENV SP, E xecutive Director, Gwinnett Village Community Improvement District 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. TransportationCamp Texas, Colonnade Salon 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Updates to 2010 Highway Capacity Manual (HCM), Windsor Salon Instructor: D r. Bastian Schroeder, P rincipal Engineer, Kittelson and Associates, Inc. 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. Ice Breaker Reception MONDAY, June 27 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast in Exhibit Hall 8:30 – 10:15 a.m. Plenary Session, Grand Salon Moderators: Ernie Heymsfield, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, University of Arkansas, Conference Co-Chair Geoff Baskir, C.M., AICP, M.ASCE, General Engineer, Conference Co-Chair Welcome Remarks: Robert D. Stevens, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, 2 015 President, ASCE Keynote Speakers: Sylvester Turner, Mayor, City of Houston Marc D. Williams, P.E., D eputy Executive Director, Texas Department of Transportation Wanming Zhai, S outhwest Jiaotong University, Chinese National Academy of Sciences 10:15 – 10:45 a.m. Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 10:45 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Plenary Session, Grand Salon (continued) Moderators: Ernie Heymsfield, Ph.D., P.E., F.ASCE, University of Arkansas, Conference Co-Chair Geoff Baskir, C.M., AICP, M.ASCE, General Engineer, Conference Co-Chair Keynote Speakers: Ed Emmett, Harris County Judge Denise Nelson, P.E., ENV SP, LEED AP, V ice President, Institute of Sustainable Infrastructure Robert Barker, C hief Development Officer, Infrastructure, Houston Airport System Shaun McCabe, Texas Central Railway 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. Lunch and Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. Concurrent Technical Session 1 TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G TRACK D, Airfield Pavement & Aviation Ops Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Infrastructure Management Colonnade Salon B Session 1A: Lessons Learned From China’s High Speed Rail Development and the Prospects in the United States Session 1B: Envision: Award Winning Projects: The Method and Value Session 1C: Permeable Pavements Design, Construction, & Maintenance Session 1D: Trends in Airport Planning, Design, & Construction I Session 1E: M2D2: Changing State DOT Culture to Get the Rules Right Moderator: K elvin C.P. Wang, Oklahoma State University; Panelists: W anming Zhai, Member of Chinese Academy of Sciences; X iaobo Liu, Qiyuan Peng, and Yanjun Qiu, Southwest Jiaotong University, China The following topics will be presented and discussed: Current High-Speed Rail Network in China, and in-Construction and Planned High-speed Rail Network in China, W anming Zhai, Member of Chinese Academy of Sciences Differential Pricing Strategy to Optimize High-Speed Rail Passenger Train Operation,Xiaobo Liu, Southwest Jiaotong University, China Risk Analysis and Prediction for HighSpeed Rail Dispatch and Command System, Q iyuan Peng, Southwest Jiaotong University, China Asphalt Layer for Load Bearing TrackSlab of High-Speed Rail Line, Y anjun Qiu, S outhwest Jiaotong University, China Automated Inspection of Rail Infrastructure: Challenges and Potentials, K elvin C.P. Wang, Oklahoma State University Moderator: M arsha Anderson Bomar, winnett Village Community Improvement District G Panelists: M arsha Anderson Bomar, G winnett Village Community Improvement District; K ip Skabar, Stantec; C hris Malmberg, H DR Moderator:Kathlie Bullock, City of Houston, Texas Overview of Permeable Pavement Structural and Hydrologic Design, Robert Bowers, Interlocking Concrete Pavement Institute Preliminarily Site Evaluation and Design, C hris Denich, Aquafor Beech Ltd. Atlanta Green Infrastructure Initiative – PICP Case Study, Todd Hill, City of Atlanta Maintenance of Permeable Pavements, D avid Hein, Applied Research Associates Moderator: D wight Pullen, Skanska USA Building The New Houston Mickey Leland International Terminal, Jarrett Simmons, Houston Airport System International Operations Challenges: George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Houston, Lana Van Marter, Houston Airport System State-of-the-Art Blast Resistant Design of Airports: Innovative Analytical Methodologies and Tools, T imothy R. Brewer, John E. Crawford, and Peter J. Vonk, Karagozian & Case, Inc. Commercial Spaceports: Where We Are and Where We Are Going, B rian Gulliver, Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc. Lessons Learned form Airport Consolidated Rental Car Centers, Jeffrey Jarvis, T ranSystems Moderator: R ayla Bellis, Smart Growth America Speakers: R oger Millar, W ashington State DOT; Billy Hattaway, Florida DOT; Tony Kratofil, Michigan DOT 3:30 – 4:00 p.m. Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Visit This session will provide and present an overview of Envision, explore the benefits and ways in which to use Envision, and illustrate highlights from the first transportation project to receive an Envision platinum award. The panel will also show examples of other types of projects on which Envision has been used. The session will include a presentation by Chris Malmberg of HDR titled, Envision - A Sustainability Tool to Guide Transportation Projects. www.asce-ictd.org Multimodal Development and Delivery (M2D2) is Smart Growth America’s technical assistance program that supports State Departments of Transportation (DOTs) across the country as they improve their institutional capacity to plan, design, construct, operate and maintain state transportation systems for Complete Streets and multiple modes. 11 Technical Program (continued) MONDAY, June 27 (continued) Concurrent Technical Session 2 4:00 – 5:30 p.m. TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G TRACK D, Airfield Pavement & Aviation Ops Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Infrastructure Management Colonnade Salon B Session 2A: Rail Planning & Management I Session 2B: Transportation & Development I Session 2C: Highway Pavement Performance I Session 2D: Trends In Airport Planning, Design, And Construction II Session 2E: Infrastructure Systems Management Moderator: M icheal J. Loehr, CH2M Hill Identification of Suitable High Speed Rail Corridors in the Chicago Region: Moving More People and Freight Faster, M ary Kaufman, ASCE T&DI Sustainability Committee A Transfer Routes Choice Model of Railway Passenger Based on the Maximum Utility, Jin Zeng and Xiaonan Jin, Beijing Jiaotong University; C hunjiao Dong and David B. Clarke, U niversity of Tennessee Evaluation of MRTS Using Spatial Technique: A Case Study,Rajiv Gupta, R. Srinivas, P. Rajesh Reddy, and Vemula Swathi, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Moderator: John Harvey, University of California at Davis Transportation & Economic Development: An Assessment of the SHRP2 C11 Tools and Their Synergies with Economic Simulation Models for the Evaluation of Wider Economic Benefits of Transportation Projects, R uiman Yang, Davis Chacon-Hurtado, Eleni Bardaka, Konstantina Gkritza, and Jon D. Fricker, P urdue University Infrastructure Optioneering: An Analytical Hierarchy Process Approach, S . Deo, D. Gilmore, M. Van Thof, and J. Enriquez, A rup Regional Governance and Hub Stations: The Impact on Development and Transport Connections, R ebecca Heywood and Joseph Sussman, M assachusetts Institute of Technology Accommodating Cyclists in Highway Maintenance Projects – An Incremental Approach to Complete organtown Monongalia Streets, Jing Zhang, M MPO Moderator: H ao Wang, R utgers, The State University of New Jersey Experimental Investigation of Geogrid Properties Affecting Pavement Structural Performance, M ehmet Saltan, Serdal Terzi, and Suleyman Gokova, Suleyman Demirel University; E rol Tutumluer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Volkan Emre Uz, A dana University; M ustafa Karasahin, Istanbul University; Onur Pekcan, M iddle East Technical University Use of Variable Energy Penetrometer and Geo-Endoscopic Imaging In Performance Assessment of Working Platforms Constructed with Large Size Unconventional Aggregates, H asan Kazmee and Erol Tutumluer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Younes Haddani, Miguel A. Benz Navarrete, and Roland Gourves, Sol Solution Tackiness Properties of Non-Tracking Tack Coats, A . Seo, M. S. Sakhaeifar, and B. T. Wilson, Texas A&M University Performance Modelling for Botswana Gravel Roadways: Outcomes and Conclusions, A . S. Oladele, B otswana International University of Science and Technology Moderator: E ileen Velez-Vega,Kimley-Horn & Associates The Benefits to Airports of the FAA Airports GIS Program, M ichael T. McNerney,The University of Texas at Arlington Moving Forward: Taxiway Safety Enhancement Program, A ndrew Bodine and Doug Gregory, Crawford, Murphy & Tilly, Inc.; Mark Day, Blue Grass Airport Traffic Simulation Modeling for Airport Terminal Frontage Roadways, Kelly Bird, STV, Incorporated Airport Rental Car Facility Planning Trends, M ike Coleman, Port of Portland; Daniel Barton, InterVISTAS Consulting, Inc. Moderator: D iniece Peters, N ew York City Department of Transportation Managing and Controlling Cost Growth in Public Projects, M ichael S. Ellegood, PSMJ Resources Measuring Performance On P3 Projects Through A Systematic Requirements Management Program, David Brown, Parsons Corporation Infrastructure Deterioration Modeling – The Factor Moment Approach, Samuel Labi, Purdue University Semi-Markov Decision Process: A Decision Tool for Transportation Infrastructure Management Systems, O. S. Thomas, U niversity of the West Indies, Mona Campus; J. O. Sobanjo, F lorida A&M University–Florida State University Vulnerable User Road Safety Enhancements for Transportation Asset Management, C arlos M. Chang and Marketa Vavrova, The University of Texas at El Paso TRACK D, Airfield Pavement & Aviation Ops Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Traffic Operations Colonnade Salon B TUESDAY, June 28 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 8:30 – 10:00 a.m. Concurrent Technical Session 3 TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G Session 3A: Rail Planning & Management II Session 3B: Transportation & Development II Session 3C: Highway Pavement Performance II Session 3D: Case-Studies in Airfield Pavement Design & Construction Session 3E: The Next Generation of Transportation Systems Management & Operations Moderator: M ichael J. Loehr,CH2M Hill Public Sector Passenger and Freight Rail Programs: A Survey of U.S. Practice, D . B. Clarke, University of Tennessee; L. Ogard, P rime Focus, LLC; J . Beckett, The Beckett Group Tower 55: A Successful Partnership Beyond Your Typical P3, P atrick Halsted, Union Pacific Railroad; B rian Large, Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway;Dennis Schulze, HDR The Eagle P3 Project - Denver’s Commuter Rail, A aron Epstein, Denver Transit Partners CSX Trenton Line Clearance Improvement Project - Contract 1, Christopher W. Wright, AECOM; D erek S. Mihaly, CSX Transportation Moderator: Lenor Bromberg, City of Roswell, GA Using Pavement Condition and Structural Evaluation to Optimize Construction Haul Routes for Wind Farm Development, Laxmikanth Premkumar, Paul Dalbey and William Vavrik, Applied Research Associates Rating Systems for Sustainable Transportation: Status and Opportunities, M ichael D. Bennett and Kristen L. Sanford Bernhardt, Lafayette College A Feasibility Growth Study Of Native Mosses Associated Self-Sustaining Flora on Vertical Infrastructure, Mary A. Kaufman,ASCE T&DI Sustainability Committee Moderator: H asan Ozer, University of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign Effect of Different Levels of Moisture Intrusion on Dynamic Modulus and Tensile Properties of Dense Graded Hot Mix Asphalt using Cyclic Moisture Induced Stress Tester, S arvesh Dhakal and Reza Ashtiani, The University of Texas at El Paso Measuring Pavement Albedo and Solar Radiation Flux for Asphalt Pavements, John Hencken, Michael Tulanowski, and Thomas Bennert,Rutgers University Investigating the Permanent Deformation Behavior of Asphalt Concrete Mixtures in Repeated Load Creep Tests, N ader Mahmoodinia, Road & Urban Development Ministry, Iran;Mohammad Molayem, Iran University of Science and Technology; A lireza Fardealirezaei, Akam Rock Industries, Iran Observational Study on the Pavement Performance Effects of Shoulder Rumble Strip on Shoulders, S ean Coffey and Seri Park, Villanova University Moderator: Q uintin Watkins, Michael Baker International New Group VI Parallel Runway at Calgary International Airport: A Case History of Successful Implementation and Lessons Learned, G eorge Nowak, Hatch Unique Challenges for Airfield Paving on Grand Bahama Island, H eath Jenkins, Mott MacDonald 10 Years of Experience Using Warm Mix Asphalt for Airside Pavements – Boston Logan Airport, B rian Aho and David Hein, Applied Research Associates Inc.; Sarah Dennechuk, and Richard Bessom, Massachusetts Port Authority Evaluation of Alternatives for the Reconstruction of Runway 8/26 at Aguadilla Airport, E ileen Velez-Vega, Kimley-Horn Puerto Rico, LLC Moderator: John Corbin, U niversity of Wisconsin-Madison Panelists: John Corbin, U niversity of Wisconsin-Madison; Douglas Wiersig,City of Fort Worth; Eric Rensel, G annett Fleming;Leslie Jacobson, P arsons Brinckerhoff. This session will address recent developments and emerging trends that are transforming TSM&O into a next generation of technology and practice, as well as a robust national community of practice. An expert panel of national, state, and local leaders will explore the following topics: •Innovative tools and techniques for TSM&O created by the Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP) •Creation of the National Operations Center of Excellence as a resource for the national TSM&O community •Emergence of the Connected and Automated Vehicle, and its implication for transportation policy •TSM&O Decision Support Systems, and Big Data & Analytics •TSM&O and Freight Mobility: Logistics Management & Supply Chain Optimization 10:00 – 10:30 a.m. Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall 12 Projects and Practices for Prosperity Technical Program (continued) TUESDAY, June 28 (continued) 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Concurrent Technical Session 4 TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G TRACK D, Airfield Pavement & Aviation Ops Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Traffic Operations Colonnade Salon B Session 4A: Rail Infrastruture I Session 4B: Transportation & Development III Session 4C: Pavement Testing Session 4D: Airfield Pavement Design & Management I Session 4E: Traffic Operations Moderator: M ichael J. Loehr, CH2M Hill Stray Current Mitigation and Collection Techniques Adopted by DC Transit Agency and Its Effectiveness in Controlling Stray Currents, S aud Memon, A rup; Gary Clarner, Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County; P aul Fromme, University College London Smartphone-Based Image Analysis Technique for Ballast Aggregate, Bin Zhang, Seung Jae Lee, and Sumana Bhattacharya, F lorida International University; Yu Qian and Erol Tutumluer, U niversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Effective Radius at the Tangent Point and Its Uses, N azmul Hasan, SNC-Lavalin Inc. Moderator: Lenor Bromberg, City of Roswell, GA Addressing Social, Economic, and Environmental Impacts Brought About by Infrastructure Development in an Environmental Justice Community, Dennis A. Randolph, City of Grandview Missouri Effects and Framework to Estimate Environmental and Public Health Impacts of Infill Development for Urban Planning, F. Qiao, Q. Li, B. You, and L. Yu, T exas Southern University; K. Zhang, University of Texas Houston Health Science Center Sustainable Infrastructure: Quantifying the Impact of Pavement Construction, D . Hein, M. Harrell and T. Wilson, Applied Research Associates, Inc.; S . Gillen,Illinois Tollway Moderator: M ajed Al-Ghandour, North Carolina Department of Transportation Development of Laboratory-Scaled Accelerated Testing of Aggregate Friction Properties, E nad Mahmoud, University of Texas at Rio Grande Valley; Gabriela Perales, University of Nebraska at Lincoln; Sheila A. Beshears, Illinois Department of Transportation Performance Evaluation of CoarseGraded Field Mixtures using Dynamic Modulus Results Gained from Testing in Indirect Tension Mode,Parnian Ghasemi, Joseph Podolsky, and R. Christopher Williams, Iowa State University; Eshan Dave, University of New Hampshire Validation of Recent Technology to Measure Soil Moisture and Density for Construction Quality Control, E rnest Berney IV and Mariely Mejias, U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center Falling Weight Deflectometer Testing based Mechanistic-Empirical Overlay Thickness Design Approach for Low Volume Roads in Illinois, P. Sarker and Erol Tutumluer, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Moderator: M ike McNerney, University of Texas at Arlington Evaluation of Asphalt Concrete Layer Response Using Asphalt Strain Gauge and Fiber Optic Strain Gauge, Q iang Li and Sean Combs, SRA International, Inc.; Carlos Cary, Geminni Technologies, Inc.; Navneet Garg, Federal Aviation Administration Airfield Asphalt Pavement Preservation, G regory Cline, Federal Aviation Administration Temperature Sensitivity of Precast Concrete Panels Used for the Repair of Rigid Pavements, R eza S. Ashtiani and Gabriel De Haro, The University of Texas at El Paso Comparison of Energy Consumption and Greenhouse Gas Emission of HMA and PCC Runway Pavements using LCA, H ao Wang, Rutgers University; Scott Murrell, Applied Research Associates Moderator: Md Shoaib Chowdhury, The City College of New York Characterization of Platoon Dispersion Variables under Heterogeneous Traffic, P. S. Praveen and Ashalatha Rajamma, College of Engineering Traffic Signal Timing Optimization by Modelling the Lost Time Effect in the Shock Wave Delay Model, M ohammad Noaeen and Behrouz Homayoun Far, University of Calgary; Amir Abbas Rassafi, Imam Khomeini International University Trivandrum Estimation of Dynamic PCU Using Area Occupancy Concept at Signalized Intersections, P reethi Prathapan and Ashalatha Rajamma, College of Engineering Trivandrum System Intersection: Concept, Simulation Study, and Potential Applications, W ei Zhang, F ederal Highway Administration; Nopadon Kronprasert, Chiang Mai University 12:00 – 1:30 p.m. Francis C. Turner Lecture and Awards Luncheon TRACK D, Airfield Pavement & Aviation Ops Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Traffic Operations Colonnade Salon B Welcome Remarks: L enor M. Bromberg, P.E., M.ASCE, T&DI President 1:30 – 3:00 p.m. Concurrent Technical Session 5 TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G Session 5A: Rail Infrastruture II Session 5B: Complete Streets Session 5C: Pavement Evaluation & Performance Session 5D: Airfield Pavement Design & Management II Session 5E: Roundabout Operation & Safety Moderator: D avid B. Clarke, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville Fatigue Test of Rail, N azmul Hasan, SNC-Lavalin Inc. Mechanistic Design of Rail Transit Concrete Crossties and Fastening Systems, J. Riley Edwards, RailTEC, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Marcus Dersch and Matthew Csenge, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Rail Infrastructure Investments to Reduce Shale Development Impacts, Curtis Morgan, Jeffery Warner, Arturo Bujanda, and Lorenzo Cornejo, Texas A&M Transportation Institute Stiffness Ratio of Direct Fixation Fastener, N azmul Hasan, SNC-Lavalin Inc. Moderator: Emiko Atherton, National Complete Streets Coalition Panelists: R oger Millar, A cting Secretary of Transportation, Washington State DOT; Mari Okabayashi, T exas AARP Volunteer and Member of the Texas Silver-Haired Legislature; Adriann Murawski, S tate and Local Government Affairs Representative, National Association of Realtors; S cott Gibson, R egional Transportation Commission of Washoe County Moderator: E rol Tutumluer, U niversity of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 3D Visualization for Long Pavement Surfaces with 1mm Laser Imaging Data, Y ue Fei, Kelvin C.P. Wang, Qiang “Joshua” Li, and Cheng Chen, Oklahoma State University Quality Assurance for Automated and Semi-Automated Pavement Condition Surveys, F rancisco Dalla Rosa, Universidade de Passo Fundo – RS, Brazil; Nasir G. Gharaibeh, Emmanuel G. Fernando, and Andrew Wimsatt, Texas A&M Transportation Institute Recalibration of the JPCP Cracking and Faulting Models in the AASHTO ME Design Software, Jagannath Mallela, Parsons-Brinkerhoff, Inc.; Leslie Titus-Glover, Principal Engineer/Consultant; Biplab B. Bhattacharya, Alex Gotlif, and Michael I. Darter, Applied Research Associates, Inc. Enhancing Pavement Design Selection by Incorporating Normalization into Life Cycle Impact Assessments, S undeep Inti, Megha Sharma, and Vivek Tandon, The University of Texas at El Paso Moderator: R ich Thuma, Crawford, Murphy & Tilly, Inc. Decision Making Tool for Selection of Pavement Preservation Treatment in General Aviation Airport Pavements, Poura Arabali and Maryam Sakhaeifar, Texas A&M University; Tom Freeman, Bryan Wilson, and Jeffrey D. Borowiec, Texas A&M Transportation Institute Airfield Pavement Extended Design Life Initiative, G regory Cline, Federal Aviation Administration Foam Backfill Technologies for Expedient Concrete Airfield Pavement Repairs, Lucy Priddy and Mariely Mejias, U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center Understanding Joint Sealants and the Benefits of Extended Life Joint Sealants, U riah Carpenter and Ben Jacobus, The D.S. Brown Company Moderator: M itsuru Saito, Brigham Young University Roundabout Safety Analysis in the Context of Time Series: Case Study with State of Pennsylvania, N icholas Zoccoli, Seri Park, and Sean Coffey, V illanova University Managed Lanes: A Comparison between Truck and Bus Lane for a Roundabout, M ajed Al-Ghandour, North Carolina Department of Transportation Planning and Estimating Construction Costs for Modern Roundabouts, A lfredo Cely, Kisinger Campo and Associates Bicycle/Pedestrian Crosswalk Alternatives for Single-Lane Roundabout: Experimental Analysis of Delay, M ajed Al-Ghandour, North Carolina Department of Transportation 3:00 – 3:30 p.m. Networking Break & Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Visit www.asce-ictd.org 13 Technical Program (continued) TUESDAY, June 28 (continued) Concurrent Technical Session 6 3:30 – 5:00 p.m. TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E Session 6A: Bus Transit Moderator: W alter Kulyk, Federal Transit Administration Flexpress: A Flexible High-Speed Intercity Transit Service, A ndisheh Ranjbari and Yi-Chang Chiu, U niversity of Arizona, Tucson; M ark Hickman, University of Queensland Adaptive Bus Transit Operations for Reducing GHG Emissions, A ndrew Alden, Virginia Tech Transportation Institute Corridor-level Evaluation of GPSbased Transit Signal Priority, Y u Song, Milan Zlatkovic, and Richard J. Porter, University of Utah Modeling Bus Travel Delay and Travel Time for Improved Arrival Prediction, Srinivas S. Pulugurtha and Yashaswi Kotagiri, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G Session 6B: The Future of Transportation Session 6C: Pavement Soils & & Development – Transformative Subgrades – Compaction Technologies and Their Impact Moderator: Samuel Labi, Ph.D., Purdue University Panelists: H enry Liu,University of Michigan Ann Arbor; M ichael Meyer, C onsultant, Atlanta; Hao Yang, Lamar University; S amuel Labi, Purdue University Moderator: M ehran Mazari, Savannah State University Compaction Quality Monitoring of Lime Stabilized Clayey Subgrade Using Intelligent Compaction Technology, A njan Kumar, Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati; Jose Garibay, Raed E. AlDouri, and Soheil Nazarian, This session will discuss transformative The University of Texas at El Paso;Mehran Mazari, technologies and how these Savannah State University technologies will change the built Evaluation and Harmonization of Intelligent environment. The panel will motivate a Compaction Systems, Mehran Mazari, futuristic discussion in the fullest sense, Savannah State University; Jorge Beltran, including an exploration of alternate Raed Aldouri, and Soheil Nazarian, The futures and what it will take to bring University of Texas at El Paso; G eorge Chang, about a desired future. The session will The Transtec Group Inc.;Jimmy Si, Texas include a presentation by Hao Yang Department of Transportation titled, Eco-Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Factors Affecting Resilient and Control in the Vicinity of Intersections Permanent Behavior of Unbound Considering Vehicle Queues. Granular Aggregate Base, S ung-Hee Kim, Kennesaw State University; J ayhuyn Kwon and Mark Wayne, Tensar International Corporation Evaluation of Using Geosynthetic Material & Process of Grouting to Improve Pavement Performance over Sand Dunes Subgrade, Saad F.I. AL-Abdullah, Ph.D., Gandhi G. Sofia, Ph.D., Zaman T. Teama, Al-Mustansiria University, Baghdad TRACK D, Airfield Pavement & Aviation Ops Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Transportation Safety Colonnade Salon B Session 6D: Airfield Pavement Design & Management III Session 6E: Transportation Safety I Moderator: Julie Kenfield, Jacobsen Daniels Associates Economic Assessment of Heated Pavements for Large Hub Airports, Pritha Anand, Halil Ceylan, Sunghwan Kim, Kasthurirangan Gopalakrishnan, and Peter C. Taylor, Iowa State University; Dimitra V. Pyrialakou and Konstantina Gkritza, Purdue University Incorporating Heat Wires and Renewable Energy to Develop an Anti-Icing Airfield Runway Surface, Joseph Daniels, Ernest Heymsfield, and Mark Kuss, University of Arkansas Relationship Between Climate Type and Observed Pavement Distress, Timothy Parsons and Aaron Pullen, Applied Research Associates FAA Airfield ‘Pavement Related’ Advisory Circulars, G regory Cline,Federal Aviation Administration Moderator: Zhanmin Zhang, The University of Texas at Austin Prioritize Safety Projects with Confidence Using Two-Step Spatial Screening, W ei Zhang, Federal Highway Administration; K athleen Hancock and Harshala Sardar, V irginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Y ubian Wang, National Research Council Guardrail/Bridgerail Recommendations for Very Low-Volume Local Roads in Kansas, Ronald Seitz and Tod Salfrank, Kansas Department of Transportation Operational and Safety Effects of Reduced Cycle Length Strategy, S rinivas S. Pulugurtha, Synthia Tagar, and Preethi Goverdhanam, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte Underlying Relationships between Fatal Crashes and All Other NonFatal Crashes, W ei Zhang, Federal Highway Administration;Kathleen Hancock and Harshala Sardar, V irginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Y ubian Wang,National Research Council TRACK D, Advanced Technologies Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Transportation Safety Colonnade Salon B WEDNESDAY, June 29 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast 8:30 – 10:00 a.m. Concurrent Technical Session 7 TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Highway Pavement Regency Ballroom G Session 7A: The Future of Automated Transit Systems Session 7B: Transportation & Development IV Session 7C: Moving Research to Practice: Your Thoughts? Session 7D: Preparing Cities for the Technology Age Session 7E: Transportation Safety II Moderator: W alter Kulyk, US DOT, FTA (Retd.) This session will address the latest advances, potential benefits and future of automated transit systems. The session will highlight automated buses operating on roadways, rail transit, automated transit networks connecting different transportation modes, and strategies involving demand response systems. Speaker: S am Lott, Kimley-Horn & Associates This presentation will address the potential impact on transit operations of electronically guided and connected buses along routes and at station stops. Speaker: C raig Elliott, Lea+Elliott, Inc. This presentation will highlight the state of the automated people mover (APM) industry. It will cover the major APM suppliers, their products and recent/ future installations. Speaker: Peter Muller, PRT Consulting, Inc. This presentation will highlight the latest advances and operations of automated transit networks (ATN) around the world. Speaker: M atthew Lesh, Local Motors This presentation will cover the latest advances and potential future of automated demand response transportation systems. Moderator: S cott Gibson, R egional Transportation Commission of Washoe County The Impact of North Dakota’s Oil Boom on Transit Livability, D el Peterson and Elvis Ndembe, N orth Dakota State University Transportation Requirements for Shale Energy Developments: Complexities of Rail Infrastructure Decisions in Argentina,Bruno Agosta, AC&A; Joseph Sussman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Determining Optimal Lots for Developing Planning Park-and-Ride Facilities Process: Case Study Palm Beach County, E vangelos I. Kaisar,Florida Atlantic University; Majed Al-Ghandour, North Carolina Department of Transportation Laboratory Evaluations of LongTerm Hydraulic Performance and Maintenance Requirements for Pervious Concrete Mixes: A Case Study in Southern Brazil, Liv Haselbach, W ashington State University; Vanessa Fátima Pasa Dutra, Paulete Schwetz, and Luiz Carlos Pinto da Silva Filho, F ederal University of Rio Grande do Sul Moderators: M usharraf Zaman, The University of Oklahoma; Yinhai Wang, University of Washington A critical task for the USDOT funded University Transportation Centers (UTCs) is to transfer research products into practice. UTC researchers need your input to improve the process. Following the panel presentations, participants are expected to contribute their ideas and thoughts to facilitate the UTC technology transfer process. Partnership in Innovation and Technology: Oklahoma Success Story, Matt Warren, Oklahoma Department of Transportation; Waseem Fazal,Federal Highway Administration Challenges and Opportunities in Technology Transfer: SPTC Perspective and Experience, M usharraf Zaman, The University of Oklahoma, Norman PacTrans Research Example: Mobile Sensing and Public Perception, Y inhai Wang, University of Washington Moderator: C . Michael Walton, The University of Texas at Austin Speaker: K ristie Chin, The University of Texas at Austin This presentation will cover technologies in the Emerging Technology Portfolio developed by TxDOT’s Texas Technology Task Force. Highlights from the development of the City of Austin’s application to USDOT’s Smart Cities Challenge will be shared. Speaker: S teve Dellenback, Southwest Research Institute This presentation will explain the status of connected and autonomous vehicle (CAV) technology, CAV applications for driver safety and congestion mitigation, and the path toward a fully connected highway system. Speaker: Joe Henry, Lone Star UAS Center of Excellence & Innovation This presentation will provide an introduction to applications of unmanned aerial systems (UAS) for infrastructure systems and operations. An overview of FAA policy making for UAS will be covered and along with its implications on civil applications. Speaker: T homas Lambert, Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County This presentation will cover innovation in transit systems and discuss how smart cities can promote better multimodal systems with new technologies. Moderator: S rinivas S. Pulugurtha, Ph.D., P.E., University of North Carolina at Charlotte Safety in a Multi-Modal City: Characteristics of Commercial Vehicle Accidents in New York, A lison Conway, City College of New York Quantification of Safety Cost Caused by Heavy Trucks: An Illinois Study, A ntoine Petit, Yanfeng Ouyang, and Imad AlQadi, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign A Methodology for Assessing the Impacts of Overweight Truck Operations on Traffic Safety, A rash Roshandeh, Stephanie Everett, Samuel Labi, and Kumares Sinha, Purdue University; Nathee Athigakunagorn, K asetsart University Effects of Traffic and Geometric Design Characteristics on Truck Crashes on Limited Access Highways, Sunanda Dissanayake, K ansas State University; Niranga Amarasingha, S ri Lanka Institute of Information Technology 10:00 – 10:30 a.m. Networking Break 14 Projects and Practices for Prosperity Technical Program (continued) WEDNESDAY, June 29 (continued) 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Concurrent Technical Session 8 TRACK A, Rail & Public Transit Regency Ballroom E TRACK B, Development Regency Ballroom F TRACK C, Transportation Technology Applications Regency Ballroom G TRACK D, Freight and Multimodal Colonnade Salon A TRACK E, Transportation Safety Colonnade Salon B Session 8A: Rail Safety Session 8B: Stormwater Management Session 8C: Contemporary Transportation Issues Session 8D: Freight & Multimodal Session 8E: Transportation Safety III Moderator: S teven L. Jones, Jr., University of Alabama Binomial Logistic Crash-Frequency Model for ND Highway-Rail Grade Underdispersed Data, P an Lu and Denver Tolliver,North Dakota State University Using Gradient Boosting Approach to Investigate the Factors Influencing Crashes at Highway-Railway Crossings, Z ijian Zheng, Pan Lu, and Denver Tolliver, N orth Dakota State University Innovative Technology for ADA Compliance & Improved Safety of New Construction and Existing Track Crossings, R obert M. Loomis, The Willamette Valley Company Identifying Themes in Railroad Equipment Accidents Using Text Mining and Text Visualization, Trefor P. Williams, Rutgers University; J ohn F. Betak, Collaborative Solutions LLC Moderator: John Harvey, University of California at Davis Proactive Advances in Stormwater Management for Green Streets and Public Rights of Way in the City of Los Angeles, K en Susilo, G eosyntec Consultants; Wing Tam,City of Los Angeles Impacts of OCTA’s Measure M2 Tier 1 and Tier 2 Grant Programs on the Transportation/Stormwater Nexus, Dan Phu and Alison Army, Orange County Transit Authority; Ken Susilo and Stacy Luell, Geosyntec Consultants Constructing Green Roadways in Texas: Overcoming Challenges to Create a Multifunctional Stormwater Management System, A nthony Kendrick and David Batts, C onstruction EcoServices Moderator: Z hanmin Zhang, The University of Texas at Austin Driverless Transportation – Two Future Scenarios, P eter J. Muller, Advanced Transit Association Shared Use Mobility Issues Worldwide, K atherine Kortum, Transportation Research Board Austin-based State Employment Congestion Footprint, M inh Le, Stacey Bricka, Maarit Moran, and Kristi Miller, Texas A&M Transportation Institute Assessment of the Seismic Vulnerability of Transportation Infrastructure in Central Oklahoma, Qiang Joshua Li, Michael O’Hara, and Kelvin C.P. Wang, Oklahoma State University Interchange Lighting System Design, Construction and Maintenance: Is Privatization a Viable Option?, S rinivas S. Pulugurtha, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte Moderator: A lison Conway, The City College of New York Managing the Freight Deliveries in Manhattan: Opportunities for Collaborative City Logistics Measures, Md. Shoaib Chowdhury, The City College of New York Using Freight Data for the Texas 100 Most Congested Roadways List, B ill Eisele, Texas A&M Transportation Institute Multimodal Transportation Safety in Major U.S. Cities, Ivana Tasic and Richard Porter, University of Utah Developing Integrated Multimodal Transportation Networks in Bangladesh with Regional Connectivity: Key Issues and Challenges, M d. Shoaib Chowdhury, The City College of New York Moderator: Sunanda Dissanayake, Ph.D., P.E., Kansas State University Demonstration and Development of an Implementation Plan to Integrate the United States Road Assessment Program (usRAP) into Existing Kansas Highway Safety Programs, E ric J. Fitzsimmons, Sunanda Dissanayake, Ben Nye, and Alex Gustafson, K ansas State University Evaluating Perception Index for Cyclist’s Safety to Determine the Minimum Overtaking Distance, D ivya J. Nair, Neeraj Saxena, and Vinayak V. Dixit, University of New South Wales Safety Effects of Shoulder Bypass Lanes in Rural Areas, S unanda Dissanayake and Alireza Shams, K ansas State University Exploring Friction Modification Factor to Improve Safety of Horizontal Curve Roadways, K imberley Musey and Seri Park, Villanova University;John McFadden, T urnerFairbanks Highway Research Center The Tri-Zone Concept: Exploring the Relationships between the Intensity of Safety Features and Safety Performance, S amuel Labi, Purdue University 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Technical Tours, Sponsored by TranStar Traffic Operation Center Tour George Bush Intercontinental Airport Tour Houston Uptown Management District Tour ESSL, LLC ESSL, LLC “Your Clay Soil Stabilization Specialists” “Your Clay Soil Stabilization Specialists” Uns table soil conditions exist throughout the United States and result i n billions of dollars of damage to property Unstable soil conditions United States and resultthan in billions of from dollars of damage to property each ea ch year.exist Coststhroughout associated withthe unstable soil conditions are greater the damage earthquakes, year. Costs associated conditions are greater than the damage from earthquakes, hurricanes and hurri ca with nes andunstable tornadoes soil combined. tornadoes combined. ESSL, LLC ha s the only proven, economical a nd premiere product on the market. Our product, EcSS 3000, i s afe and has been i njected successfully i n over 190 mi llion square feet of clay s oil without a ESSL, LLC has theenvi onlyronmentally proven, seconomical and premiere product on the market. Our product, EcSS 3000, is environmentally s i ngle failure. safe and has been injected successfully in over 190 million square feet of clay soil without a single failure. We ha ve invested over a million dollars in research with Texas A&M, Penn State, a nd Oklahoma State University We have investedto over a million dollars research with Texas A&M, Penn State, and Oklahoma State University to test, tes t, prove and confirm ourin product is the premier solution to your s oil stabilization needs. prove and confirm our product is the premier solution to your soil stabilization needs. Ca l l our toll free number 877-426-8016 toda y for more information about EcSS3000 or vi sit our website Call our toll free www.esslsoils.com. number 877-426-8016 today for more information about EcSS3000 or visit our website www.esslsoils.com. Visit www.asce-ictd.org 15 Poster Displays in Exhibit Hall Highway Pavement Mechanical Properties of Multi-function Road Surface and Its Application on Steel Bridge Deck, Yangyong Sun and Changyu Yin, Highway Research Institute, Guangdong Provincial Academy of Building Research, China Evaluating Fatigue in Hot Asphalt Samples Modified by Titanium Oxide Nano-Particles,Javad Tanzadeh, Rashid Tanzadeh, and Hossein Nazari, Islamic Azad University, Iran Performance of Overlay Tester in Monotonic and Cyclic Loading Modes, V ictor Garcia, Jose Garibay, Imad Abdallah, and Soheil Nazarian, The University of Texas at El Paso Predictive Modeling of Pothole Formation due to Traffic and Environment, Leila Sadeghi and John E. Haddock, Purdue University Explaining Overlay Tester Results with Digital Image Correlation and Finite Element Analysis, E stefany Ramos, Andrea Gutierrez, , Cesar Tirado, Calvin Stewart, Imad Abdallah, and Soheil Nazarian, The University of Texas at El Paso Performance Evaluation of Reinforced Roller Compacted Concrete Pavement with Basalt Fibers and Recycled Polyethylene in Warm Region of Iran, Rashid Tanzadeh, Javad Tanzadeh, Majid Haji Hosseini, and Mehrnaz Mirsepahi,Islamic Azad University, Iran Statistical Analysis of Axle Load Distributions in India, Donia Savio, Pranjal Paul, and J. Murali Krishnan, Indian Institute of Technology Madras Performance Evaluation of the Impact of Modified Silica Nano-Materials on Hydrophobicity of Hot-Mix Asphalt, Fereydoon Moghadas Negad, AmirKabir University of Technology, Iran; Javad Tanzadeh and Mandana Soozangar, Islamic Azad University, Iran Laboratory Performance Comparison of Stone Matrix Asphalt Mixtures with Polymer Modified Bitumen and Cellulose Fiber Stabilizer, Goutham Sarang, Lekha B M, Ramesh Tejavath, and Ravi Shankar A U, National Institute of Technology Karnataka, India Fabrication of Polytetrafluoroethylene Coated Asphalt Concrete Biomimetic Surfaces: A Nanomaterials Based Pavement Winter Maintenance Approach, A lireza Sassani, Ali Arabzadeh, Sunghwan Kim, Kasthurirangan Gopalakrishnan, and Halil Ceylan, Iowa State University Backcalculation of Pavement Layer Thickness and Moduli by Wavelet-Neuro Approach,M. Saltan, S. Terzi, and Ö. Terzi, Suleyman Demirel University Cluster Analysis of LTPP Data to Estimate MEPDG Traffic Inputs for NM State and Perform Sensitivity Analysis, Umme Amina Mannan, Jielin Pan, and Rafiqul Tarefder, University of New Mexico Evaluating Benefits of Geocell Reinforcement of the Base Course in 2 Flexible Pavement Structures using 3-D Finite Element Modeling, Megha Sharma, Sundeep Inti, Cesar Tirado, and Vivek Tandon, The University of Texas at El Paso Rutting Potential of Asphalt Pavement Exposed to High Temperatures, Mohammad Hossain, Rohit Mehta, and Naushad Shaik, Bradley University; Md Islam, Colorado State University; Rafiqul Tarefder, The University of New Mexico Evaluation of Pavement Surface Characteristics for High Friction Surface Treatment (HFST), Qiang Li, Guangwei Yang, Kelvin C.P. Wang, and Jason Zhan, Oklahoma State University Improvement of Thermal and Mechanical Properties of Asphalt Mixture using Conductive Fillers, Hai Viet Vo, DaeWook Park, and Woo-Jin Seo, Kunsan National University Incorporation of Rice Husk Ash as Cement Replacement, Muhammad Aleem, U niversity of South Asia, Pakistan Verification and Local Calibration of the MEPDG JPCP Transverse Cracking, Faulting, and IRI Models in Arizona, Michael I. Darter, Biplab B. Bhattacharya, and Leslie TitusGlover, Applied Research Associates; Paul Burch, Arizona Department of Transportation 16 Dealing with Construction over Sinkhole-Prone Karst Terrain, Gennaro Marino, Marino Engineering Associates, Inc. NJ Quiet Pavement Noise Analysis, J . R. Hencken, M. Tulanowski, and T. Bennert, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rail & Public Transit Hertzian Spring Constant, Nazmul Hasan, S NC-Lavalin Inc. Influence of Elasticity Modulus of Cement Asphalt Mortar on Temperature Stress and Deformation of CRTS II Slab Track, Song Xiaolin, Zhao Chunfa, and Zhu Xiaojia, Southwest Jiaotong University, China The Probability Density Evolution Analysis of Extreme Responses for Vehicle-Track System under Random Rail Irregularities, Xu Lei and Gao Jian Min, S outhwest Jiaotong University, China A Novel Approach to Assess Railway Track Quality based on Ensemble Empirical Mode Decomposition, Z aiwei Li, Shanghai University of Engineering Science; X iaoyan Lei, East China Jiaotong University; L iang Gao, B eijing Jiaotong University Analysis on Dynamic Performance of High-speed Train Running on Different Types of Ballastless Track Structures, Xuancheng Yuan, Guoying Tian, Kaiyun Wang, and Wanming Zhai, S outhwest Jiaotong University, China Review of Global Evidence of the Ridership and Transportation System Impacts of High-Speed Rail, Benjamin R. Sperry, Ohio University Automated Survey of Railway Conditions: A Preliminary Investigation, B aoxian Li, Xianxing Dai, Kelvin C.P. Wang, Enhui Yang, and Yi Peng, Southwest Jiaotong University, China Risk Analysis and Prediction for High-Speed Railway Dispatch and Command System,Qiyuan Peng, Chao Wen, and Siyu Tao, Southwest Jiaotong University, China Optimizing Dispatching Schedules of Urban Rail Rapid Transit Network, H zhou Qu and Xiaobo Liu, S outhwest Jiaotong University, China Application of Asphalt Mixture for Railway in Korea, Seong-Hyeok Lee, K orea Railway Research Institute; D aeWook Park and Hai Viet Vo, Kunsan National University; Hyeok-Jung Kim, K umho Petro Chemical Company Making Transit Reliability Benefits Accessible to Engineers, John Parker and Ben Rommelaere, Impact Infrastructure Inc. Probabilistic Cost Benefit Analysis for Shifting Transit Vehicles Fleet from Gasoline into Compressed Natural Gas in Lebanon, D ima Jawad and Sari Malaeb, N otre Dame University Rapid Increase of Privately Owned Motor Vehicles and Lack of Public Transport in Dhaka City,Dhrubo Alam and Ananya Roy, Tokyo Institute of Technology; Sudip Barua, University of Alberta Feasibility of Folk Capital Investment Modes in Public Transport Considering Passenger Value, Yunqiang Xue, Hongzhi Guan, and Huanmei Qin, B eijing Univerisity of Technology, China Effect of Multi-Level Urban Form on Commuting Mode share in Rail Station Areas Across the United States; A Seemingly Unrelated Regression Approach, A refeh Nasri and Lei Zhang, U niversity of Maryland, College Park Traffic How Accurate Are Turning Volume Counts Collected By Microwave Sensors? M itsuru Saito, David Chang, and Grant Schultz, B righam Young University Discretized Travel-Time Model of Dynamic Link, Ying Liu and Chun-guang Jing, A cademy of Transportation Sciences, Beijing; Yong Zhang, Soochow University, China; Ming-jun Liao, Beihua University, China; Zhen-hua Zhang, B eijing Communications Road Affair Bureau, China Modeling the Impacts of Driver Aggressiveness during a No-Notice Metropolitan Evacuation, R . N. Fries, Karna Ghale, Karzan Bahaaldin, and Xin Chen, S outhern Illinois University; Michael Williamson, Indiana State University Projects and Practices for Prosperity A Simulation Based Operations Evaluations of Major Interchange Configurations, M d. Shoaib Chowdhury, The City College of New York Operational Effects of Slow Vehicle Turnouts on Rural Highway in Alaska, J eanne M. Bowie and James R. Kinney, Kinney Engineering, LLC Urban Travel Time Reliability Under Different Traffic Conditions, Fangfang Zheng and Xiaobo Liu, S outhwest Jiaotong University, China; Henk van Zuylen, Delft University of Technology Transportation Safety Generic Methodology for 3-D Available Sight Distance Calculation, K iriakos Amiridis and Nikiforos Stamatiadis, University of Kentucky; B asil Psarianos, N ational Technical University of Athens, Greece Field Analysis of the Effects of Vehicle Speed on Increasing the Noise Levels in the Vehicles through Transverse Rumble Strips, M ohammad Sadegh Bahadori, Khavaran Institute of Higher Education, Iran; M orteza Bahadori, A mirkabir University of Technology, Iran Mitigating Safety in Utah Using the Hot Spot Identification and Analysis Methodology, Grant G. Schultz and Mitsuru Saito, B righam Young University;Jacob S. Farnsworth, Kimley-Horn & Associates, Inc. Factors Affecting Accident Frequencies on Curved and Straight/Level Highway Segments, U gur Eker and Panagiotis Anastasopoulos, SUNY-Buffalo An Analysis of Time-to-Accident Occurrence Using Random Parameters Hazard-Based Duration Models, T awfiq Sarwar, Ugur Eker, and Panagiotis Anastasopoulos, SUNYBuffalo High Friction Surface Treatments: A Safety Countermeasure in Roadway Departure Crash Reduction, Joe Cheung, FHWA, U.S. DOT Child Pedestrian Safety: Examining Opportunities for Improvements Around Parks, N ick Ferenchak, U niversity of Colorado, Denver Development of Crash Prediction Models for Curved Segments of Rural Two-lane Highways, Casey Knecht, Oregon Department of Transportation; Mitsuru Saito and Grant G. Schultz, B righam Young University Development Land Use and Transportation Modeling, Alireza Gerayeli, Michael Baker International; Jacqueline M. Jenkins, Cleveland State University Efforts in Transportation Sustainability: Case Study of Villanova University, Patrick McTish, Seri Park, and Liesel Schwarz, Villanova University Providing a Methodology to Codify Regulations for Private Parking in the Tehran City, Mortaza Khalili and Mojtaba Ghadiri, P ardaraz Consulting Engineers, Iran; Amirreza Nickkar, Sharif University of Technology, Iran Propounding of an Archetype and Proferring the Reinvigoration of Dilapidated Town Center of Surat City, Yamee Thakkar, S VNIT, India Other A Flight Ground Waiting Time Threshold Optimization Model, Yaping Zhang, Qi Fan, and Siqi Hao, H arbin Institute of Technology, China; Zhiwei Xing, C ivil Aviation University of China The Impact of Technology on Global Engineering Service Corporation Organizational Performance, William Bersing, Louis Berger General Information Housing Meeting Room Overcrowding Omni Houston Galleria Hotel – The Official Conference Headquarters 4 Riverway Houston, TX 77057 Phone: (713) 871-8181 No Smoking Policy ADA Compliance The Omni Houston Galleria is ADA compliant and meets all regulations. If you require special assistance at the Conference, please submit a written description of your requirements with your registration form or email registrations@asce.org before May 26, 2016. While ASCE will make every effort to meet the needs of the disabled, accommodations cannot be guaranteed without prior notification. Assumption of Risk All ASCE events and activities are purely voluntary activities; and attendees are fully responsible for their own conduct and well-being, including without limitation, determining their level of fitness to take part in any such event or activity. In participating in any event or activities, attendees shall be deemed to understand and accept all risk of possible physical injury might occur as a result of such participation. Attendee Packets Early Bird and Advance registrants will receive their name badges and tickets at the Registration desk during registration hours. To expedite the check-in process, it is recommended you bring your email confirmation with you – especially if you registered after June 1. Badge Policy and Ribbons Your Conference registration name badge is your admission to the Conference sessions. Tickets are required for the pre- and post-conference events, meals, and special events. Ribbons will be available at the Registration desk. Please remove your badge when leaving the hotel. Cancellations/Refunds Cancellations must be sent to ASCE in writing or via e-mail by June 1, 2016. All refunds are provided on a case by case basis and are reviewed 30 days post conference. Conference Proceedings If you pre-registered for the Proceedings, you will receive a copy along with your conference materials at the Registration Desk. Following the conference, individual papers may be purchased at www. ascelibrary.org. Local Medical Facilities In the event of a medical emergency at the Omni Houston Galleria Hotel, please contact the hotel’s Front Desk. You may also contact the Baylor St. Luke’s Emergency Center - San Felipe, (713) 972-8300, for any medical or dental needs. Included in Your ICTD 2016 Conference Registration Fee Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall Lunch in the Exhibit Hall Awards Lunch Proceedings Visit www.asce-ictd.org ASCE and the Omni Houston Galleria Hotel are required to follow local fire regulations and may ask participants in rooms filled to capacity to choose another event. Since many events are extremely popular, it is wise to select alternative events as you plan your conference schedule. Smoking is only allowed outside the Omni Houston Galleria Hotel and all venues hosting ASCE events. Professional Development Hours (PDHs) You may earn PDHs, which are nationally recognized units of record, by attending conference concurrent sessions, short courses and technical tours. See program insert for details. Please note there are differences from state to state in continuing education requirements for professional engineering licensure. Each state licensing board has the final authority to approve course, credits, PDHs, and other methods of earning credits in that state. ASCE strongly recommends that individuals regularly check with their state licensing boards for specific continuing education requirements in their jurisdictions that affect professional engineering licensure and the ability to renew licensure. Program and Session Cancellation ASCE reserves the right to cancel programs and/or sessions because of low registration. In the unlikely event of a cancellation, all registrants will be notified and will receive a full refund, if applicable. Programs and sessions are subject to change, and ASCE reserves the right to substitute a program, session, and/or speaker of equal caliber to fulfill the educational requirements. Release/Waiver Photographs: Photographs of the event may be taken by ASCE, its agents, contractors, or representatives, and such photographs may be used for any purpose at ASCE discretion. Liability Waiver: I agree and acknowledge that I am undertaking participation in ASCE/T&DI events and activities at my own free and intentional act, and I am fully aware that possible physical injury might occur to me as a result of my participation. I give this acknowledgement freely and knowingly that I am, as a result, able to participate in ASCE/T&DI events, and I do hereby assume responsibility for my own well-being. I also agree not to allow any other individual to participate in my place. Speaker Ready Room A Speaker Ready Room will be available Monday through Wednesday from 7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. for all presenters in the Churchill Room. Tour Policy All tours will depart from the Omni Houston Galleria Hotel lobby. Please plan to arrive 15 minutes prior to start time as buses will leave on time. Tours are available on a first come, first serve basis and have limited capacity. A separate registration fee is required to offset the costs involved with the tours. ASCE reserves the right to cancel a tour if the minimum registration is not met. Full Registration Daily Full 4 4 4 4 Day 1 4 4 Exhibitor Day 2 Day 3 Guest Student Sponsor Full Booth Staff Corporate 4 4 4 N/A 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 N/A 17 WOMEN MEN SERVICE ELEVATOR STAIR D Exhibitors SERVICE CORRIDOR See you in the Exhibit Hall! Seating 150 8 Exhibit Hall Schedule 7 Sunday, June 26 6 Exhibitor Move-in 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. Welcome Reception Monday, June 27 F Continental Breakfast 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. Lunch 3:30 – 4:00 p.m. Networking Break Tuesday, June 28 8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. Exhibit Hall Hours 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast 10:00 – 10:30 a.m. Networking Break 3:00 – 3:30 p.m. Networking Break 3:45 – 8:00 p.m. Exhibitor Move-Out 10' 4 10' 8' 3 G 2 10' 13'6" 10' 1 9 10 ENTRANCE The D.S. Brown Company www.dsbrown.com Booth #2 D.S. Brown Company is a manufacturer of airport, bridge and highway construction products. Pavement Products include Delastic preformed pavement neoprene (polychloroprene) compression seal and Delpatch elastomeric concrete. 18 Southwest Jiaotong University, Chemring Sensors and Electronic Chengdu, China Systems10 - 8' x 10' Booths 14 - 8' Posterboards www.swjtu.edu.cn www.3d-radar.com Booth #5 Booth #4 15 - 6' Rounds/10 per Southwest Jiaotong University (SWJTU) is a Chemring Sensors & Electronic Systems is major research university in China. SWJTU is comprised of NIITEK, 3d-Radar and Chemring particularly known for its various transportation Detection Systems, and together, they are the programs. leading supplier of vehicle-mounted ground penetrating radar (GPR) detection systems, Terracon Consultants, Inc. ICTD 2016 chemical and biological detectionJune systems, and 26-29, 2016 www.terracon.com counter-IED electronicOmni countermeasures. Houston-Regency Ballroom A-D /Booth Houston, #7TX STAIR B BERKEL www.berkelandcompany.com Booth #10 A specialty design-build contractor offering Augered Pressure Grouted (APG) and Drilled Displacement (APGD) Piles, Ground Improvement, Sheeting and Shoring, Underpinning, Anchors, Driven Piles, and Drilled Shafts. Full in-house engineering and design services are available. MECH American Concrete Pipe Association www.concretepipe.org Booth #6 The American Concrete Pipe Association is the spokesperson for the concrete pipe industry in all matters affecting the industry’s welfare. ACPA members contribute to the improvement of our environment by producing quality concrete pipe, engineered to provide a lasting and economical solution to drainage and pollution problems. PREFUNCTION A 2016 Exhibitors (as of 5/25/16) Terracon provides geotechnical engineering, ESSL, LLC Harris DRAWN BY: Tony REVISION DATE: 06/07/16 environmental consulting, and construction www.esslsoils.com materials engineering and testing services on Booth #1 transportation projects through more than 130 ESSL, LLC manufactures and applies offices nationwide (16 in Texas). EcSS3000™ – the premier soil stabilization product and process on the market. More than Willamette Valley Company 170 million square feet of clay soils have been www.wilvaco.com injected without failure. www.fastpatchsystems.com RDM International, Inc. www.rdmintlinc.com Booth #3 RDM International, Inc. (RDM) is a civil engineering firm specializing in airfield and roadway evaluation, design, and construction phase services. Projects and Practices for Prosperity Booth #9 Fastpatch repairs and preserves concrete slabs and asphalt pavement. Easy and safe to mix and install, 100% solids and VOC free. Intended for spall repairs both large and small. Prevents F.O.D and provides long lasting repairs. FA Exhibit Hall Hours 8:00 – 8:30 a.m. CORRIDOR A 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. 5 PREFUNCTION B 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. FA Exhibits reflecting all areas of transportation and development design, construction and operation will run throughout the conference to give you a look at leading edge suppliers and service providers to the industry and ideas for E your projects and operations. Cooperating Organizations Thank You to Our Cooperating Organizations! Visit www.asce-ictd.org 19 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TRANSPORTATION & DEVELOPMENT 2016 Thank You to Our Sponsors! Contributions from the following sponsors will enable ICTD 2016 to continue its commitment to excellence in programming and networking events for attendees. GOLD Environmental Soil Stabilization, L.L.C. CORPORATE SPONSORS Environmental Soil Stabilization, L.L.C. Environmental Soil Stabilization, L.L.C. North America SILVER BRONZE SUSTAINING CORPORATE MEMBER For up-to-date information, visit www.asce-ictd.org. 20 Projects and Practices for Prosperity