Ramani, Tara Lakshmi (2008-08). An improved methodology for multi-criteria assessment of highway sustainability. Master's Thesis. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • The concept of sustainability has been widely discussed in relation to human activity and scientific development in recent times. There is an increased awareness of the current and future ramifications of people's everyday activities on the environment, and sustainable development aims to mitigate these impacts, as well as promote social equity and economic efficiency. A majority of research concerned with transportation sustainability addresses it at the policy-planning level, though there have been recent attempts at quantitatively evaluating it. These evaluations are mostly based on multicriteria decision making processes using performance measures. However, the methods and the performance measures developed are often not geared toward being practically implemented within a transportation agency's regular planning activities. This research effort seeks to improve upon existing sustainability evaluation processes for highways by proposing a methodology that addresses sustainability within the regular transportation planning paradigm, rather than as a separate concern. A more scientific approach to the scaling of various performance measures, as well as the evaluation of current and future planning scenarios on a common basis provides for an improved multi-criteria evaluation method. A case study was conducted using the proposed methodology for a section of US Highway 281 in San Antonio, Texas. The evaluation model developed in this study provides the basis for further research into applying decision-making processes to improve transportation sustainability by addressing some of the inherent drawbacks of existing research on sustainability evaluation.
  • The concept of sustainability has been widely discussed in relation to human activity
    and scientific development in recent times. There is an increased awareness of the
    current and future ramifications of people's everyday activities on the environment, and
    sustainable development aims to mitigate these impacts, as well as promote social equity
    and economic efficiency. A majority of research concerned with transportation
    sustainability addresses it at the policy-planning level, though there have been recent
    attempts at quantitatively evaluating it. These evaluations are mostly based on multicriteria
    decision making processes using performance measures. However, the methods
    and the performance measures developed are often not geared toward being practically
    implemented within a transportation agency's regular planning activities.
    This research effort seeks to improve upon existing sustainability evaluation
    processes for highways by proposing a methodology that addresses sustainability within
    the regular transportation planning paradigm, rather than as a separate concern. A more
    scientific approach to the scaling of various performance measures, as well as the
    evaluation of current and future planning scenarios on a common basis provides for an
    improved multi-criteria evaluation method. A case study was conducted using the
    proposed methodology for a section of US Highway 281 in San Antonio, Texas. The
    evaluation model developed in this study provides the basis for further research into
    applying decision-making processes to improve transportation sustainability by
    addressing some of the inherent drawbacks of existing research on sustainability
    evaluation.

publication date

  • August 2008