04974nam 2200709 450 991014045160332120210420105038.01-119-03882-01-119-03884-7(CKB)2670000000613976(EBL)1895288(SSID)ssj0001539515(PQKBManifestationID)11841459(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001539515(PQKBWorkID)11531752(PQKB)11412436(Au-PeEL)EBL1895288(CaPaEBR)ebr11052806(CaONFJC)MIL779421(OCoLC)908519918(MiAaPQ)EBC1895288(EXLCZ)99267000000061397620150519h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierPavement asset management /Ralph Haas and W. Ronald Hudson with Lynne Cowe Falls ; cover design by Kris HackerottHoboken, New Jersey :Scrivener Publishing LLC,[2015]©20151 online resource (403 pages)Description based upon print version of record.1-119-03883-9 1-119-03870-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Half Title page; Title page; Copyright page; Dedication; Preface; Part One: The Evolution of Pavement Management; Chapter 1: Introduction; Chapter 2: Birth and Teen Years of Pavement Management (1967-1987); 2.1 Network Level PMS; 2.2 The Impact of Lack of Understanding of Software Requirements; 2.3 Lessons Learned from the Early Development Years; 2.4 Basic Requirements for an Effective and Comprehensive PMS; Chapter 3: Pavement Management Development from 2010; 3.1 Data Aggregation and Sectioning; 3.2 Private Investment; 3.3 Parallel International Developments3.4 Administrative and Public Awareness of PMS3.5 Education; 3.6 Improvements in Computers and Software Development; 3.7 Other Compatible Management Systems; 3.8 Expansion of PMS Concerns; Chapter 4: Setting the Stage; References for Part One; Part Two: Data Requirements; Chapter 5: Overview of Pavement Management Data Needs; 5.1 Classes of Data Required; 5.2 The Importance of Construction and Maintenance History Data; 5.3 The Importance of Performance Related Pavement Evaluation; 5.4 Objectivity and Consistency in Pavement Data Acquisition and Use; 5.5 Combining Pavement Evaluation MeasuresChapter 6: Inventory Data Needs6.1 Purpose of Inventory Data; 6.2 Types of Inventory Data; 6.3 Selection and Referencing of Pavement Management Sections; 6.4 Collecting and Processing Section and Network Data; 6.5 Traffic and Truck Load Data; Chapter 7: Characterizing Pavement Performance; 7.1 The Serviceability-Performance Concept; 7.2 Pavement Roughness; 7.3 Equipment for Evaluating Roughness; 7.4 Toward a Universal Roughness Standard; 7.5 Calibration Needs and Procedures; 7.6 Relating Roughness to Serviceability; 7.7 Applications of Roughness DataChapter 8: Evaluation of Pavement Structural Capacity8.1 Basic Considerations; 8.2 Nondestructive Measurement and Analysis; 8.3 Destructive Structural Evaluation; 8.4 Structural Capacity Index Concepts; 8.5 Network versus Project Level Applications of Structural Capacity Evaluation; Chapter 9: Evaluation of Pavement Surface Distress Condition Surveys; 9.1 Purposes of Surface Distress Surveys; 9.2 Manual Methods for Distress Surveys; 9.3 Automated Survey Methods; 9.4 Types of Distress; 9.5 Examples of Distress Survey Procedures; 9.6 Equipment for Distress Evaluation9.7 Summary of Pavement Distress Scores Used by State DOTs9.8 Example Equipment: Fugro, Roadware-ARAN; 9.9 Example Equipment: Service Provider-Pathway Services Inc.; 9.10 Application of Distress Data; Chapter 10: Evaluation of Pavement Safety; 10.1 Major Safety Components; 10.2 Skid Resistance Evaluation; 10.3 Basic Concepts of Skid Resistance and the Importance of Pavement Texture; 10.4 Methods of Measuring and Reporting Skid Resistance; 10.5 Change of Skid Resistance with Time, Traffic, and Climate (Weather/Season); 10.6 Including Friction Management in a Pavement Management SystemChapter 11: Combined Measures of Pavement QualityPavementsMaintenance and repairPavementsDeteriorationExpress highwaysRoadsPavementsMaintenance and repair.PavementsDeterioration.Express highways.Roads.625.76Haas Ralph772406Hudson W. RonaldFalls Lynne CoweHackerott KrisMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910140451603321Pavement asset management2273721UNINA