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The capable and proficient locator had had years of experience in recon-
naissance, preliminary, and location surveys; in highway design; and in high-
way construction and maintenance. For lack of time, he seldom determined route
alternatives to compare one with another. His justifications for directly mak-
ing one route determination only were that highway location was an art acquired
by experience and sustained by inherent aptitudes.
Based on what the locator saw, on what his previous personal experiences
were in highway location, and on his own judgment, he flagged on the ground for
preliminary survey the route he considered to be the most practicable. The
locator, of course, had ground survey parties to make the preliminary survey
where he designated. They ran the traverse, measured its profile and the cross
sections, made other essential measurements, and kept field notes thereon; and
noted the character of topography, ground conditions, drainage, land use, and
the like for utilization in design.
Of course, when a highway location was determined solely by working on the
ground, its quality could not be verified by others except by their reviewing
it on the ground and making such additional route determinations as were nec-
essary for achieving adequate comparisons and evaluations. This in effect
meant a repetition of virtually all work completed by the initial locator.
Such procedures were costly in both time and money. Consequently, the quality
of route locations so determined, and their acceptance, were based largely on
the reputed competence of the particular locator. But in actuality, even a
highly competent locator might not be able to determine the best location,
because of time limitations, weather conditions, or other interfering factors
beyond his control.
Weaknesses in the preceding practice have sometimes been revealed through
comparisons made, not by direct intent, but because of a succession of
unplanned events, such as follows: (1) need, before constructing the highway
on the initial location, of extending the route beyond one or both of its orig-
inal termini; or (2) postponement of construction for lack of funds and subse-
quent changed conditions requiring better curvature, gradient, and cross sec-
tion standards to satisfy needs for increased traffic services; or conversely,
demanding construction of a road in minimum time and for the limited funds
available, regardless of the extent to which standards must be reduced; or
(3) the original locator could not complete the initial location work because
he transferred, retired, resigned, or became indisposed. The succeeding loca-
tor, before continuing rou where the preceding locator had ended his work,
had to become familiar with conditions and accomplishments in relation to the
old and new requirements. He had to review and, in some instances, duplicate
a small or major portion of the previous locator's work before he could begin
to perform the work required of him. Such review and duplication, whether
accomplished on the ground or by utilization of aerial surveys, sometimes
revealed the original route location was badly positioned in whole or in part,
or at least could be improved.
Whenever the route reviewing and additional surveying were done by aerial
methods over a broad area from one terminal point to the other, the opportunity
was afforded for easily and quickly determining every feasible highway location
alternative. Thus many alternatives could be compared and the best one ascer-
tained. Upon comparing the best route, as determined by aerial methods, with
the original route location made by ground methods, it frequently became evi-
dent that the quality of the latter's service standards were deficient and its
positioning on the ground inferior to other possibilities. Before needed exten-
sions and revisions could be made appropriately and economically, it was desir-
able, and sometimes essential, to abandon part or all of the first surveyed
route and locate another. Thus, it is evident that when engineers were working
without the aid of aerial surveys, they were extremely handicapped, especially
were ‘they lacking in time and capacity, if not funds, to make the thorough and
comprehensive surveys that are now possible by aerial methods.