Incorporating Road User Costs into Integrated Life-Cycle Cost Analyses for Infrastructure Sustainability: A Case Study on Sr-91 Corridor Improvement Project (Ca)
Life-cycle cost analysis (LCCA) is a decision-making tool that allows governing agencies the ability to assess several long-term alternative investment options. This paper presents a LCCA analysis process which integrates the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) program, RealCost (a road user cost calculation program), the FHWA-endorsed Construction Analysis for Pavement Rehabilitation Strategies (CA4PRS) and Caltrans specific design tools (CalFP and CalAC), into the existing Caltrans LCCA process (a modified version of the FHWA LCCA process). In using tools backed by the FHWA and validated through previous agency use, the presented process has a potential to be replicated on urban corridor improvement projects across the US while aiding agencies in achieving economical sustainability throughout the infrastructure maintenance phases. This paper also fills the gap identified by Ozbay et al. in 2004, incorporating road user cost calculations into the LCCA process. Validation was achieved through the execution of the recently completed 1.4BUSCaliforniaSR−91CorridorImprovementProject.TheSR−91teamusedthepresentedtooltochooseoneofthetwoalternatives(maintainHOVSR−91laneandaddI−15HOVlaneusinglong−lifePortlandCementConcretePavementoraddExpressLanetoSR−91andI−15usinglong−lifeContinuouslyReinforcedConcretePavementandAsphaltConcretePavement),equatingtoanestimatedlife−costsavingsof32 M.112Nsciessciscopu
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