June 12, 2005
A pavement network is important to any community.
Investing in a
pavement management system (PMS) can pay for itself many times over
through reduced repair costs, optimized maintenance schedules and
interagency coordination (e.g.making sure that newly paved roads are
not immediately torn up for sewer or cable maintenance).But for a PMS
to make the maximum impact and yield the highest return on investment,
it must be easily accessible and understandable to all users, including
maintenance crews and departmental staff in planning, public works,
transportation and finance.
Sonoma County's Department
of Transportation and Public Works and Farallon Geographics of San Francisco
implemented an Enterprise GIS asset tracking system to help monitor and
maintain the County's pavement network system.The new GIS-PMS allows
County management to use a Web-based map
interface to identify problem pavement areas in near real-time.
Sonoma County is located to the north of San Francisco.Sonoma County's
Public Work's department is responsible for maintaining 1,387 miles of
the County's 1,857 roads, a network of pavement regularly traveled by
hundreds of thousands of vehicles.
County engineers were already using a PMS application called
StreetSaver, developed and sold by the Bay Area's Metropolitan
Transportation Commission (MTC).
Engineers collect and enter information about specific stretches of
roads (e.g.pavement condition, available maintenance treatments and
costs and the history of the road network) into a StreetSaver form.
Using the relevant data, StreetSaver can perform budget analysis,
including projecting costs of network maintenance and rehabilitation as
well as creating budget alternatives.These budget analyses are used to
allocate pavement maintenance budgets.
StreetSaver's analysis and output capabilities are limited to tabular
datasets and reports.County engineers recognized that presenting the
results of their pavement management analyses using maps would be a
more compelling and information-rich way to visualize StreetSaver's
data and results.This would allow both managers and technicians to see
where they might gain maintenance efficiencies.StreetSaver and the
County's ESRI ArcGIS were not linked.Further, each system
contained different types of data.To display road condition
information, County managers printed out hard copy maps from the GIS
and then manually highlighted problem areas that were identified based
on StreetSaver database printouts.
MTC and the County recognized that dynamically integrating the County's
ArcGIS system and StreetSaver would make it possible to generate
integrated maps that could show both detailed street maps and pavement
condition and maintenance information.The Sonoma/Farallon GIS-PMS does
just that using dynamic segmention of the street data into pavement
sections.
This insures that visual displays are always in sync with the tabular
data.The linkage also makes real-time scenario and maintenance
analysis possible."We immediately recognized the usefulness of the
maps.Because our mapping system is interactive, we can use maps to
show managers and funding agencies our street maintenance
responsibility," said Mark Wein, Civil Engineer with Sonoma County's
Department of Transportation and Public Works.
The team used ESRI's ArcSDE geodatabase technology and Microsoft's SQL
Server database to design a GIS data model that would support
integrated, real-time access to StreetSaver's pavement information.To
get the network GIS model to interact with PMS data required building
dynamic segmentation procedures using tools in ArcGIS.The team used
the StreetSaver database post mile data at the time the user requests
the information to partition the streets into paving sections in
real-time.The tabular and map datasets always remain in sync and the
GIS maps can accurately highlight just the portions of a roadway that
require maintenance.
The dynamic segmentation capability allows edits to be made to the
StreetSaver data directly from the GIS by clicking on a segment and
changing attributes specific to the road network segment.Pavement
managers can immediately see the results of such data changes on a map.
Using the integrated GIS and PMS, County staff can quickly map
StreetSaver information into the GIS and perform spatial analysis,
allowing them to quickly create maps showing the extent of distressed
streets "We already had spent the time and research to develop a
route-based system," said Tom Nguyen, Senior Engineering Program
Analyst with Sonoma County's Department of Transportation and Public
Works."Public Works staff could now use the GIS-PMS to quickly create
and present maps showing the extent of distressed pavement, and the
location and number of lanes and average daily traffic volume
throughout the County."
The team also developed and deployed an internally accessible Web
site
to ensure that County managers could immediately to see the latest
pavement distress maps and budgeting scenarios.The ArcIMS Web
application allows Planning, Public Works and Finance personnel to
interact with StreetSaver tabular data linked with dynamically
segmented GIS maps.This site allows management personnel, who are not
GIS experts, to quickly identify and understand problem pavement areas.
The GIS-PMS
produces strong visual evidence of
street pavement conditions throughout the County.It should ultimately
reduce
the number of complaints from residents as well as allowing Public
Works to
prioritize work and funding."Because the maps are interactive, we can
use them
to show funding agencies our street maintenance responsibility," said
Wein.
The GIS-PMS also
serves as a sophisticated asset management system.Traditional asset
management
systems are not suited to handle geographically based assets, which
have been
managed alphabetically or in arbitrary groups.But assets such as
pavement
networks and utilities are best managed by a system that relates assets
through
maps.
A further benefit of using a GIS-based PMS is that it allows easier
compliance with the new accounting rules
that require government
entities to present a set of financial statements with a "net asset"
focus.Long-term
fixed assets such as pavement assets were previously expensed and not
capitalized on their balance sheets.The GIS-PMS allows the County to
not be required to depreciate pavement assets.Depreciation is required
if proper maintenance activity cannot be demonstrated.
|
Your Comments Post a comment All comments provided in this section are those of the individual who has created the post. These are not the opinions of Directions Media, its editors, staff or owners unless otherwise noted. Directions Media retains the right to edit or delete any comments posted herein.
|
|
||||||
| Hi Dear compant! I am studing in surveying. now I research about applicton of GIS in PMS .please send me your exprince in this case. Be sure!If you do this work for me and I will use it I will your name in my researching and remain that some part of my researching is from your company. |
||||||

