Introduction To Traffic Engineering
Introduction To Traffic Engineering
Introduction To Traffic Engineering
Transportation Engineering
Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Transportation engineering is the application of technology and scientific principles to the planning, functional design, operation, and management of facilities for any mode of transportation in order to provide for the safe, rapid, comfortable, convenient, economical, and environmentally compatible movement of people and goods.
Traffic Engineering
Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Traffic engineering is that phase of transportation engineering which deals with the planning, geometric design and traffic operations of roads, streets, and highways, their networks, terminals, abutting lands, and relationships with other modes of transportation.
Course Syllabus
Assignments 25%
Which should be done by yourself and emailed at the specified time. Assignment solutions would be online after the due.
http://webpages.iust.ac.ir/amiripour
References
Traffic Engineering, Roger P. Roess, Elena S. Prassas, William R. McShane, Pearson Education International, 2004. Highway Capacity Manual, 4th Edition, transportation Research Board, Washington DC, 2000. Traffic Engineering, Jalil Shahi, Markaz Nashr Daneshgahi, (in Farsi) Class lecture notes online at
www.webpages.iust.ac.ir/amiripour
Transportation Modes
Road Rail Air Maritime Pipeline
Transportation Modes
Urban People Transportation Systems
Automobile Taxi/For-Hire Vehicles Local Bus Transit Express Bus Transit Para-transit Light Rail Heavy Rail Ferry
Transportation Modes
Urban People Transportation Systems Intercity People-Transportation Systems
Automobile Intercity Bus Railroad Air Water
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Transportation Modes
Urban People Transportation Systems Intercity People-Transportation Systems Urban and Intercity Freight Transportation
Long-Haul Trucks Local Trucks Railroad Water Air Freight Pipelines
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Professional Ethics
According to outcomes it produces great responsibility
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Transportation Demand
Transportation demand is directly related to land-use patterns and to available transportation systems and facilities.
Transportation planners and traffic engineers attempt to provide capacity for observed or predicted travel demand by building transportation systems. The improvement of transportation systems, however, makes the adjacent and nearby lands more accessible and, therefore, more attractive for development. Thus, building new transportation facilities leads to further increases in lan-duse development, which (in turn) results in even higher transportation demands.
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Transportation Demand
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Traffic Engineering
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TSM: How much new capacity can be added? TDM: How much capacity can be allowed?
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Traffic Control
Ramp metering Signal Coordination Signal Phase Sequence Left Turn Treatments Parking Restrictions
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Reading
Traffic Engineering, Roess, Prassas, McShane, [1] pp. 1-16