Skip to content
Facebook iconYouTube iconTwitter iconFlickr iconLinkedInInstagram
Office of Planning, Environment, & Realty (HEP)
HEP Events Guidance Publications Glossary Awards Contacts

Design Philosophy and Background on Design Criteria (AASHTO)

Transportation Research Board (TRB), National Cooperative Highway Research Program

Geometric design is defined as the design of the visible dimensions of a highway, with the objective being the “forming” of the facility to meet the functional and operational characteristics of drivers, vehicles, pedestrians, and traffic. This is both a science as well as an art. Geometric design deals with features of location, alignment, profile, cross section, and intersections for a range of highway types and classification.

The geometric form and dimensions of the highway should properly reflect driver safety, desires, expectations, comfort, and convenience. It should do so within the context of a host of constraints and considerations, including terrain, land use features, roadside and community effects, and cost considerations.

Central to the geometric design process is the application of design criteria, guidelines, and standards. Such criteria and standards provide acceptable dimensions or values for the purpose of producing a facility of a given quality (operational and safety) in a cost-effective manner. Experience has shown that the use of generally accepted practices and concepts and uniform design values can provide a reasonable degree of safety. A uniform approach to design provides a consistent “expectation” for the user (e.g., red light at the top of a signal indication, exit to the right, appropriate operating speed, etc.). This expectation is particularly important for the inexperienced driver, the older driver, a driver unfamiliar with the road or area, the distracted or inattentive driver, or the impaired driver. A uniform design approach also addresses the safety and other needs of pedestrians and bicyclists.

Most agencies develop and use what are referred to as standard drawings, standard details, and other documents referred to as design standards. Such documents are useful in that they promote design efficiencies (i.e., in most cases it is not necessary and not cost effective to originally design a feature from scratch each time a project is designed) and as such represent good quality control practices.

Designers and the public should not confuse use of design standards with providing a “standard” design. A standard design is not always the “best” design. Site-specific issues that dictate another, more “context-sensitive” solution must often be considered. Merely applying a design that complies with standards or criteria is not always the best solution. Designers are often required to be creative and sensitive in addressing the many facets of design to fit a particular situation. As designers respond to increasing concerns over community values, social, economic, and environmental constraints, the need for flexibility in the design process becomes more significant. Flexibility is best achieved by experienced design professionals in consideration of all known factors and related trade-offs. It should not be viewed as a reduction in geometric criteria. Of course, in the pursuit of flexibility, the expected safety performance of the facility should be consistent with that expected of a “full standard” design.

Updated: 6/20/2017
HEP Home Planning Environment Real Estate
Federal Highway Administration | 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE | Washington, DC 20590 | 202-366-4000