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Once the mapping is completed, a reconnaissance-type initial design is
made of the highway to achieve the best possible alinement, gradients, grading
cross sections, foundation for the highway, and traffic services; and least pos-
sible rise and fall, grading and other construction quantities, and. interfer-
ence with or damage to existing land use. This work is accomplished with the
maps and the aerial photographs which are used concurrently. The photographs
are stereoscopically examined to ascertain and utilize the pertinent qualita-
tive information. As an intermediate step, such field checks, as are neces-
Sary, are made on the ground with photographs and maps in hand (on both of
which the initially designed location is delineated) to substantiate decisions
made in performance of the design. Results of this design are determination
of construction quantities, construction costs, vehicle operation costs, antic-
ipated maintenance costs, approximate costs of rights-of-way, road-user benefit
ratios, and the attainment of the best route- for the highway.
Clearing before preliminary survey
Wherever, following determination of the best route in the preceding steps
of this stage, the vegetation-covered route is to be cleared for preliminary
Survey, an accurate description is computed, utilizing plane coordinates of the
initially designed centerline. Also a survey tie is computed between each sta-
tion marker of basic control surveys for the project, as targeted before pho-
tography, and the nearest alinement point, as a change in curvature, point of
intersection of semitangents, or & point on a tangent joining circular curves
where there is a crest in the topography which will provide intervisibility on
the ground to other alinement points for which such ties are similarly computed.
Clearing limits are then determined and the designed and computed centerline is
Staked accurately on the ground, along with the clearing limits.
When large scale photographs are used
Whenever sufficient detail cannot be seen on the small scale photographs
used in the preceding stage, wherever access to routes for inspection of the
ground is very difficult, and/or wherever it is not intended to do any clear-
ing, but tall, dense vegetation prohibits attainment of sufficient accuracy in
the mapping which will be required in the subsequent preliminary survey stage,
large scale photographs of each route alternative are taken and utilized. The
photographic coverage of each route is obtained at scales of 1,000 to 500 feet
to one inch (1:12,000 to 1:6,000) in areas of rugged topography and at scales
of 500 to 200 feet to one inch (1:6,000 to 1:2,400) for areas of rolling to
smooth topography and where land use is intense. The width of photographic
coverage is & nominal maximum of 3 miles (5 kilometers) and usual minimum is
l mile (1.6 kilometers).
Each route is transferred from the small scale photographs to the large
scale photographs as they are examined stereoscopically. The transfer is accom-
plished by correlating route position on the separate sets of photographs by
identification of images of the same ground objects or patterns on both sets of
photographs. In lieu of making investigations on the ground throughout each
route, the large scale photographs are examined in detail stereoscopically to
determine the controls of route positioning which should be met to best serve
traffic, and to take advantage of the topography and land use. The controls
of topography and land use which should be avoided, wherever possible, are also
ascertained. Each route location positioning on the large scale photographs is
adjusted so as to improve the alinement and gradients, and place it on the best
topography from the standpoint of grading quantities, ground stability, least
drainage, best exposure, least damage to and/or interference with existing
land use, and best traffic services. The route is placed on the photographs in
stereoscopic correspondence with topography to guide the preliminary survey
parties on the ground. Costs of rights-of-way, construction, maintenance, and