My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
12-20-2017 Council Packet
>
City Council Packets
>
2010-2019
>
2017
>
12-20-2017 Council Packet
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
4/23/2019 10:28:08 AM
Creation date
1/3/2018 1:17:22 PM
Metadata
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
126
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
<br /> <br />- 2 - <br />I. INTRODUCTION <br /> <br />The City Council of the City of Little Canada authorized Elfering & Associates to prepare <br />this report to determine the feasibility of the improvement of three streets within the City <br />by rehabilitation or reconstruction as part of the 2018 Street and Utility Improvements <br />project. The following is a list of the streets that have been identified by the City to be <br />considered for improvement. <br /> <br />PROPOSED <br />IMPROVEMENT <br />METHOD <br />Jackson/Old C/Lake <br />Shore <br />Little Canada <br />Road Demont Ave. 3,100 Mill & Overlay <br />Park View Court Little Canada <br />Road Cul-de-sac 280 Mill & Overlay with Curb <br />Replacement <br />Condit St./Burke Lane Nadeau Rd. Nadeau Rd.900 Reconstruction <br />TOTAL 4,280 <br />STREET SEGMENTS AND IMPROVEMENT METHOD <br />FROMSTREETS TO LENGTH (ft) <br /> <br /> <br />Exhibits 1 through 3 in Appendix A show the project locations and the properties that will <br />be affected. <br /> <br />The City of Little Canada has a Pavement Management Program in-place. The purpose <br />of this program is to maintain and improve the street system within the City. The <br />Pavement Management Program rates all City streets in order to improve the efficiency <br />and effectiveness of the City’s pavement upgrade program. <br /> <br />All of the City’s streets were rated in the spring of 1997 using the MicroPAVER PCI <br />surface distress survey and inventory methodology for a network level inspection. Each <br />street within the City was broken into segments using intersections as the dividing <br />points. A 2,500 square-foot test section was measured out for each segment to <br />represent the entire segment. The data collected from the field for each test section <br />consisted of 19 different types of pavement distress and the level of severity of each <br />one. The different types of distress include longitudinal and transverse cracking, <br />alligator cracking, bumps, potholes, and weathering, among others. Based on this <br />collected field data, the computer program generated a Pavement Condition Index (PCI) <br />rating for each street. <br /> <br />The American Public Works Association’s (APWA) MicroPAVER software was used to <br />reduce field data into a PCI rating on a scale of 0 to 100. Streets are then selected for <br />maintenance, rehabilitation or reconstruction, based upon the PCI rating, Department of <br />Public Works history of maintenance, field observation, and engineering judgment. <br /> <br />The streets are then prioritized for various maintenance procedures or rehabilitation. <br />Streets with PCI ratings of 0 to 60 are candidates for reconstruction. Those streets with <br />ratings in the range of 61 to 80 are candidates for surface rehabilitation in the form of <br />recycling or milling and overlaying. Streets with a rating in the range of 81 to 90 are
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.