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Minimizing total cost of construction, maintenance, and transportation costs with computer-aided forest road design

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Title Minimizing total cost of construction, maintenance, and transportation costs with computer-aided forest road design
Names Akay, Abdullah Emin (creator)
Sessions, John (advisor)
Date Issued 2003-03-31 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2003
Abstract The systems currently available for forest road design are not capable of
making computer-aided design judgments such as: 1) automated generation of
alternative grade lines, 2) optimizing vertical alignment, 3) minimizing total cost of
construction, maintenance, and transportation costs, and 4) aiming for least
environmental impacts. In recent years, advances in the processing speed and realtime
rendering and viewing of high-resolution three dimensional (3D) graphics on
microcomputers, combined with improved resolution in mapping technologies have
made it possible to locate a route interactively between two given points on a 3D
display of a ground surface. A 3D forest road alignment model, TRACER, aided by
an interactive computer system, was developed to help a designer with rapid
evaluation of alternatives. The road design objective is to design a path with the
lowest total construction, maintenance, and transportation costs, while conforming to
design specifications, environmental requirements, and driver safety.
The model relies on a high-resolution digital elevation model (DEM) to
provide terrain data for supporting the analysis of road design features such as ground
slope, topographic aspect, and other landform characteristics. Light Detection and
Ranging (LIDAR) system is one of the systems that provide high-resolution and
accurate DEM data. The contributions of the TRACER program are: (1) data input is
enhanced through a 3D graphic interface, (2) user efficiency is enhanced through
automated horizontal and vertical curve fitting routines, cross section generation, and
cost routines for construction, maintenance, and vehicle use, (3) road feasibility is
ensured by considering terrain conditions, geometric specifications, and driver safety,
(4) design time is reduced in the early stage of the forest road design by allowing the
designer to quickly examine alternative routes, (5) economic efficiency is enhanced
by combining modern optimization techniques to minimize earthwork allocation cost
using linear programming and to optimize vertical alignment using a heuristic
technique (Simulated Annealing), and (6) environmental impacts are considered by
estimating the average annual volume of sediment delivered to a stream from the road
section. It is anticipated that the computer-aided analysis of route selection will
improve the efficiency of road designers in identifying road alignment alternatives
that are best suited to local conditions considering costs, environmental impacts, and
driver safety.
Genre Thesis
Topic Forest roads -- Design and construction -- Cost control
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/9295

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