U.S. Department of Transportation
Federal Highway Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC 20590
202-366-4000


Skip to content
Facebook iconYouTube iconTwitter iconFlickr iconLinkedInInstagram

Home / Briefing Room / Press Releases

Briefing Room

Subscribe to FHWA Press Releases

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, Office of the Secretary, Office of Public Affairs, Washington, DC 20590

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, May 8, 2003
Contact: Bill Outlaw
Telephone: 202-366-0660
FHWA 14-03

FHWA Releases 2003 Version of Highway Safety Tool for Rural Roads

The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) today announced the release of the 2003 version of the Interactive Highway Safety Design Model (IHSDM), a new computer software program to help improve safety by providing state and local transportation officials with better information on the effects of design decisions they make for two-lane rural roads.

"This new software program is a great example of how technology can be used to improve highway safety," FHWA Administrator Mary E. Peters said. "The program will help engineers and project planners to make more precise decisions by enabling them to measure and quantify the safety performance of specific design features on two-lane rural roads."

Forty-one percent of this country's fatal crashes occur on undivided two-lane rural roads. In 2001, an estimated 17,000 traffic fatalities occurred on these roads. Transportation planners can use IHSDM, for example, to estimate the frequency and severity of crashes on specific highway segments or measure expected car speed at various points along a road based on design and driver behavior patterns.

In the 2003 version of the software, planners can evaluate the safety of two-lane rural highways through five modules:

  • Policy review-to ensure roadway design elements, such as cross section, lane, and curve design, are in compliance with guidelines;
  • Crash prediction-to estimate the number and severity of crashes on specified roadway segments;
  • Design consistency-to assess driver speed behavior in relation to specific design features;
  • Intersection review-to identify potential safety concerns in intersection geometric design and suggest possible remedies; and
  • Traffic analysis-to evaluate roadway traffic operations under current or projected traffic loads through simulation.

To encourage the use of IHSDM, the FHWA incorporated mechanisms to exchange IHSDM-related data with commercial roadway design software used by highway agencies and their design consultants.

This version of the IHSDM is a product of the FHWA's Safety Research and Development Program at the Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center, culminating a multi-year research and development effort.

The 2003 release of the IHSDM software can be downloaded free of charge at http://www.tfhrc.gov/safety/ihsdm/ihsdm.htm.

###

FHWA Press Room


 

FHWA Press Releases

Page last modified on September 14, 2012
Federal Highway Administration | 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE | Washington, DC 20590 | 202-366-4000