| Description | By Robert Cummings or presentation at the 53rd Highway Geology Symposium, San Luis Obispo, CA, August, 2002.
Highway development projects crossing lands with special scenic or
recreational characteristics may be required to meet special aesthetic
criteria. Generally, the entity imposing the aesthetic criteria is
external to the core roadway construction team. Usually, agencies
imposing these criteria are land administration entities, external to
highway departments, whose primary role is the preservation of
historical or recreational opportunities, such as the Bureau of Land
Management, the National Park Service, the United States Forest
Service, or local governmental agencies with similar responsibilities.
However, agencies imposing aesthetic criteria may also be divisions of
highway development agencies themselves. For example, in Arizona, the
Roadside Development section within the Arizona Department of
Transportation has defined aesthetic needs on numerous designated
scenic highways.
Aesthetic attainment on highway jobs falls in the category of what
many term “soft engineering”, whose design is, in large part,
intuitive. This contrasts strongly with the “hard engineering” elements
(structures, pavement, line and grade, and so forth) whose design is
deterministic and more familiar to roadway designers and builders. From
the perspective of the highway designer and constructor, the imposition
of unfamiliar and sometimes vague design and construction criteria, by
external entities whose approach differs greatly from that of
engineers, can be problematic. The aim of this paper is to describe how
geology, construction engineering, and visual analysis have been used
to alleviate and streamline the process of aesthetic attainment.
|