Title: INSE-6311 Sustainable Infrastructure Planning and Management Systems
1INSE-6311 Sustainable Infrastructure Planning and
Management Systems
- Framework of Infrastructure Management
2Covered Topics
- Definition of infrastructure
- Brief history
- Infrastructure management
- Issues, challenges and opportunities
- Role of engineering
- Needs assessment
- Life cycle concepts
- Transportation asset management
- New approaches for infrastructure financing
3What is Infrastructure?
- A civilizations rise and fall is linked to its
ability to feed and shelter its people and to
defend itself. These capabilities depend on
infrastructure - the underlying, often hidden
foundation of a societys wealth and quality of
life. A society that neglects its infrastructure
loses the ability to transport people and food,
provide clean air and water, control diseases,
and conduct commerce. - NSF, Civil Infrastructure Systems Research,
1994.
4What is Infrastructure? (2)
- The nations infrastructure is its system of
public facilities, both publicly and privately
funded, which provide for the delivery of
essential services and a sustained standard of
living. This interdependent, yet self-contained,
set of structures provides for mobility, shelter,
services, and utilities Americas
infrastructure is the base upon which society
rests. Its condition affects our lifestyles and
security and each is threatened by its unanswered
decay. - Associated General Contractors of America, 1982.
5Milestones in (U.S.) History
- Has generally paralleled economic development
- Roads
- Railroads
- Telegraph/ Telephone
- Sewer/Water Supply Systems (1800-1850)
- First federal highway funds (1918)
- Franklin Roosevelt - public works funding (1930)
- Interstate Highway System (1950)
6What is Infra. Mgmt.?
- Administrative process of creating, planning, and
maintaining our infrastructures - An integrated, inter-disciplinary process that
ensures infrastructure performance over its life
cycle - Life cycle is entire time from design through
decommissioning
7Overall Framework for Infra. Mgmt.
Program/Network/ System Level
Database
Project Level
In-Service Monitoring Evaluation
8Program/System Level
- Data (location, performance, evaluation)
- Deficiencies/Needs (current, future)
- Alternatives and Analyses
- Priorities
Financing
Budgets
Policies
Exogenous Factors
9Project/Section Level
- Data (materials, loads, flows, costs, etc.)
- Detailed Design
- Construction
- Maintenance
Standards/ Specifications
Budget Limit
Environmental Constraints
10Ideal Infra. Mgmt. System
- Would coordinate and enable the execution of all
activities - Maximizes use and expenditure of resources
- Maximize performance of assets
- Serve all management levels
11Key Issues
- Decay and deterioration (condition, failure)
- Lack of maintenance/renovation
- Scarcity of financing
- Federal govt funds projects of
national/interstate importance - states left to
build the rest - Money tends to be for construction and not
maintenance - Lots of infrastructure needs - which ones are 1
priority? - Inadequate reporting and accounting
12State of Highways and Bridges (U.S.)
- 235,000 miles of roads rated poor or mediocre
- gt70 of peak-hour travel on urban interstates is
congested - 1/3 bridges structurally deficient or obsolete,
and needs improvements - gt25 of bridges are more than 50 years old
13State of Water (U.S.)
- 10,000 dams classified as high hazard
- 13,500 as significant hazard
- Compliance costs to meet Safe Water Drinking Act
3 billion per year - Will need 3,400 new treatment facilities
14Construction Industry
- 13 of GDP
- Second largest industry in U.S.
- Also most fragmented
- 1 million firms, 10 million workers
- Lots of small firms (subcontractors)
- Lags behind other major industries in terms of
RD - High-tech, chemicals, etc. 3-4, construction
only 0.5
15Financials
- Federal investment on infrastructure stock fell
from 1.2 of GDP in 1980 to 0.8 in 1993. - Since majority of infrastructure funding comes
from U.S. government, this is a big problem - Concern for spending has reduced this even more
16Risk, Sustainable Development
- Risk and liability concerns generally lead to
low-risk designs, which rewards stability not
innovation - Also challenges related to building with an eye
towards the resource needs of future generations
17Opportunities
- Need follow-through on National Construction
Goals - Innovative financing (e.g. infrastructure bonds)
- Link between infrastructure investment and
economic productivity - High-Performance Materials
18How did this happen?
- Construction wins votes, no one cares about
rehabilitation/repair - Institutional issues favor construction financing
- Rehabilitation has high total costs in urban
environments
19Why Does it Matter?
Social System
Economic System
Physical Infrastructure
Natural Environment
20Where Does Engineering Help?
- Systems engineering perspective
- Framing of problem
- Using quantitative tools to solve it
- Tools uncertainty/risk analysis
- Optimization via Linear Programming,
Probabilistic, etc. - Both parts are important
21CONTEXT (Tech./Social/Political Environment)
PROBLEM RECOGNITION (Reviews, Preliminary
Assessments)
Periodic In-Service Monitoring Evaluation
PROBLEM DEFINITION (Objectives, Constraints,
Decisions)
GENERATION OF ALTERNATIVES
ANALYSIS/EVALUATION/ OPTIMIZATION
IMPLEMENTATION (Schedules, Activities,
Documentation)
22Tools for Optimization
- Mathematical Programming
- LP (min/max with constraints), etc.
- Heuristics
- Probabilistic
- Graphical (e.g. Scheduling Charts)
23Needs Assessment
- Concept of need used casually
- Can refer to both need for repair as well as
need for new capacity - It is difficult to judge how much infrastructure
a region or a society needs and how need is
measured - Economic viability? Growth?
- What is a better approach?
24Approach to Defining Needs
- National Council on Public Works Improvement
(NCPWI) 1986 - considers - Consumer Demand
- Recognition that demand changes
- Consumer willingness to pay
- Benefit-cost analysis
25Other Issues on Needs
- Instead of focusing on conditions, establish
future investment priorities - Instead of simply finding cost to repair,
consider cost of alternatives with same effect - Consider infrastructure output as measure
instead of condition - Funding needs to match area of influence, e.g.
federal money for federal interests
26More Issues
- Needs assessments should distinguish
- Safety or structural defects
- Capacity shortages
- Upgrading to new standards
- Current and future demands
27Economics
- Performance P(S,D,t)
- S Supply of infras. Services S(X)
- X set of functional characteristics
- Planners want adequate X, S over time
- D demand for these services
28Life Cycle Cost Analysis (LCCA)
- A life cycle is the entire length of time from
design, planning, construction, operation,
maintenance, and decommissioning/demolition - It is important to understand the cost
implications of design decisions across the life
cycle - Also important to understand where in the life
cycle that total costs occur
29Life Cycle Cost Influences
Level of Influence
Cumulative Cost
100
50
Increasing Expenditure
0
Planning
Decreasing Influence
Design
Construction
Maintenance
Disposal
Time
30Related Topic Service Life
- Physical service life is the length of time which
a piece of infrastructure is able to be kept in
useful service - Depends on all life cycle phases
- Can be extended from original design due to
rehabilitation or preventive maintenance
31Expected Service Life Estimates
- Airport Buildings - 150 yrs
- Runways - 50 yrs
- Bridge Decks - 50
- Bridge Sub-/superstructure - 125
- Tunnels - 200
- Sports Complexes - 300
- Electricity/telephone lines - 400
Source Hudson, Haas, Uddin
32New Approach for Infra. Mgmt.
- Critically review status of infrastructure
- Understand issues in managing existing
infrastructure rather than building new - Develop awareness of tools and resources for
infrastructure management
33Areas of concern
- Structural Deficiency (SD) - has been restricted
to light loads, or is closed, or requires
immediate work to stay open - Functionally obsolete (FO) - one of several
design parameters no longer meets usual criteria
for system
34Obsolescence
- No longer meets current needs or expectation
levels - Aging, technology, standard change
- 2-yr old computers good example
- Inability to meet changing performance
requirements
35Obsolescence Service Life
- Always remember that someone, somewhere is
making a product that will make your product
obsolete - -Georges Doriot
- Planned obsolescence by Vince Packards The
Waste Makers - Practice of deliberately designing products to
last for a shorter period of time - Systemically doing this leads to inferior products
36What Causes It?
- Technological change
- Regulatory change
- SDWA forced upgrades
- Economic / social changes
- Value / behavior changes
37Service vs. Physical Lives
- Physical Lives time it takes for infrastructure
to wear out/fail - Predicting this may be irrelevant
- Service life time actually used
- In general these 2 are different
- Power plants become obsolete because of
technology/policy changes
38Design service life
- Design service life only meaningful if defined
in terms of obsolescence - Assumptions about lifetime will likely change
over time - Infrastructure seldom abandoned before
replacement in place - Expectations will increase
- Need to consider expectations and deterioration
functions
39Rates of Change
- Information economy is making older transport
modes obsolete - E.g., ground -gt air shipping
- How long should infrastructure last?
- Physical or service?
- Where will it go when we are done?
- What could we do with Roman roads now?
40Strategies to Mitigate
- Plan and design for flexibility
- Build to assure optimum performance level is
achieved - Monitor change to defer obsolescence
- Repair and retrofit early
41Asset Management
- More specific than Infras. Mgmt.
- Focused on transportation Assets
- Assets people physical resources
- Guided by performance goals, time horizons,
engineering / economics - High-level assessment of trade-offs between
alternatives - Quantitative and qualitative data
- Source Asset Mgmt Primer, DOT 1999
42Investment Decision Making
Asset Management Primer, FHWA
STIP State Transportation Improvement Program
43(No Transcript)
44Bridge Management Systems
- Inventory and condition ratings
- Deteriorating prediction features
- How and when to spend money on bridges to
maintain/preserve condition - PONTIS Demo
- Even though features exist, most states use it
only for inventory/database - Economic prediction parts ignored
45Deficiency Ratings - Bridges
- National Bridge Inventory (NBI) used as
information source to U.S. Congress to justify
spending - States can use own system, but must report in
form usable by NBI - Ratings subjective, but follow a given and preset
scale - Shows coding guide and inspection rules
46New Approaches for Infrastructure Financing
- Proposed by Government Accounting Standards Board
(GASB) - Asset approach for state financial reporting
- Just like private companies do
- Costs, revenues of providing services
- Historical cost estimate or current replacement
cost - Depreciation allowed (SL, condition)
- Exempt if subject to Asset Mgmt AND in better
than planned condition - Asset Mgmt system should contain
- Inventory
- Updated condition assessment
- Expected annual maintenance costs