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Determining durations for right-of-way acquisition and utility adjustment on highway projectsSohn, Taehong 23 October 2009 (has links)
For the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), accurately predicting
durations for right-of-way (R/W) acquisition and utility adjustment on highway projects
has been deemed as one of the most important capabilities that regional districts should
possess. Because this need is so pressing, TxDOT has sought to establish an effective
methodology for predicting the durations of these two pre-construction processes. The
“Right-of-Way Acquisition and Utility Adjustment Process Duration Information (RUDI)
tool” was developed, which is an Excel-based tool that takes into consideration user
inputs regarding project circumstances such as schedule urgency and levels of
uncertainty.
In this study, the accuracy of RUDI and the key drivers that affect the durations of
R/W acquisition and utility adjustment have been examined in order to assess RUDI’s
effectiveness in implementation on projects, to identify critical needs for enhancing RUDI, and to understand how practitioners can better predict durations needed for R/W
acquisition and utility adjustment.
RUDI proved useful in predicting durations with better accuracy in spite of
limited data availability. Specifically, RUDI provided practitioners with reasonable
duration ranges that can be used in better forecasting the durations of utility adjustment.
Moreover, the study revealed that practitioners with more than 13 years of experience and
R/W acquisition specialization showed better performance in estimating durations for
R/W acquisition. Accurately estimated durations for utility adjustment were mostly
provided by practitioners working at districts located in urban or metropolitan areas in
Texas.
The drivers identified significantly influential in predicting durations for R/W
acquisition by the practitioners include “TxDOT Project Type,” “District R/W Annual
Budget,” “Dedication of Funds to the Project,” “Funding Limitations for the Project,”
“Level of Political Pressure,” “Need for Residential Relocation,” “Level of Local
Availability of Replacement Housing Facilities,” and “Likelihood of Title Curative
Actions,” “Status of Environmental Clearance,” “Status of Right-of-Way Map,”
“Frequency of Eminent Domain,” “Right-of-Way and Utility Scope,” and “Number of
Parcels for Acquisition.” Likewise, for estimating utility adjustment durations, the
drivers deemed highly influential and important by the practitioners include “Dedication
of Funds to the Project (R/W and Construction),” “Funding Limitations for the Project,”
“Have Subsurface Utility Engineering (SUE) Investigations been Performed,”
“Adjustment is Reimbursable Utility or Non-Reimbursable Utility,” “Status of
Environmental Clearance,” “Status of Right-of-Way Map,” “Right-of-Way and Utility
Scope,” “Number of Utilities Located in Private Easement,” and “Responsiveness of
Utility Companies to TxDOT Needs.” These drivers should be considered key data points in RUDI because they can provide users with more duration ranges that can be
useful in forecasting actual durations of R/W acquisition and utility adjustment on
highway projects.
The study also revealed that further research is needed to maximize the benefits of
the RUDI tool, although validating the study’s findings was restricted due to a lack of
data. Additional studies for improving the RUDI tool should focus both on collecting
more recent data and reconstructing the tool in terms of function and structure. / text
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