Office of Operations Freight Management and Operations

Freight Facts and Figures 2012

Tables 3-12. Top 25 Truck Bottlenecks on Freight-Significant Highways: 2011

Truck speed and travel time reliability data can be used to identify and quantify major freight truck chokepoints and bottlenecks along highways that are critical to the Nation's freight transportation system. FHWA developed a freight congestion index that ranks congestion's impact on freight movement. The index factors in both the number of trucks using a particular highway facility and the impact that congestion has on the average speed of those vehicles.

On weekdays, average speeds during peak periods (between 6:00 a.m. and 9:00 a.m. and between 4:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.) are typically less than those recorded during non-peak periods. Freight traveling across urban Interstate interchanges is affected to the greatest degree by peak-period congestion. At several locations, congestion affects freight mobility during all hours of the day.

Table 3-12

Table in Excel format

Location Congestion Ranking Average Speed (mph) Peak Period Average Speed (mph) Non-Peak Period Average Speed (mph) Non-Peak/Peak Ratio
Chicago, IL: I-290 at I-90/I-94 1 30.09 22.44 33.01 1.47
Fort Lee, NJ: I-95 at SR-4 2 31.29 23.86 34.76 1.46
Louisville, KY: I-65 at I-64/I-71 3 40.51 31.95 44.84 1.40
Austin, TX: I-35 4 34.87 20.69 43.37 2.10
Atlanta, GA: I-285 at I-85  (North) 5 44.69 33.74 50.20 1.49
Chicago, IL: I-90 at I-94 (North) 6 34.46 21.56 40.41 1.87
Dallas, TX: I-45 at I-30 7 40.50 31.60 44.26 1.40
Los Angeles, CA: SR-60 at SR-57  8 47.38 39.27 50.56 1.29
Cincinnati, OH: I-71 at I-75 9 46.46 37.52 50.18 1.34
Denver, CO: I-70 at I-25 10 42.25 34.40 46.10 1.34
St. Louis, MO: I-70 at I-64 (West) 11 44.21 39.17 46.35 1.18
Indianapolis, IN: I-65 at I-70 North 12 50.69 46.44 52.37 1.13
Atlanta, GA: I-75 at I-285 (North) 13 49.54 40.31 53.56 1.33
Houston, TX: I-610 at US 290 14 47.52 39.18 51.43 1.31
Houston, TX: I-10 at I-45 15 47.58 40.20 50.86 1.27
Ft. Worth, TX: I-35W at I-30 16 45.30 37.48 48.85 1.30
Houston, TX: I-45 at US-59 17 38.49 28.76 43.53 1.51
Nashville, TN: I-24 at I-440N Interchange 18 48.62 39.58 52.79 1.33
Indianapolis, IN: I-65 at I-70 South 19 50.98 47.56 52.28 1.10
Los Angeles, CA: I-710 at I-105 20 45.78 35.88 50.03 1.39
Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY: I-90 at I-290 21 44.04 40.98 45.51 1.11
Washington , DC: I-495 at I-66 22 38.87 32.26 41.09 1.27
Philadelphia, PA: I-76 at US-30 23 36.14 29.52 38.83 1.32
Dallas, TX: US 75 at I-635 24 46.61 35.82 51.29 1.43
Houston, TX: I-45 at I-610 north 25 48.94 41.60 52.25 1.26

Key: mph = miles per hour

Notes:

FHWA monitors 250 freight-significant highway infrastructure locations on an annual basis. These locations were identified over several years through reviews of past research, available highway speed and volume datasets, and surveys of private- and public-sector stakeholders. FHWA developed a freight congestion index to rank congestion's impact on freight. The index factors in the number of trucks using a particular highway facility and the impact that congestion has on average commercial vehicle speed in each of the 250 study areas. These data represent truck travel during weekdays at all hours of the day in 2011. Average speeds below a free flow of 55 miles per hour indicate congestion.

Source:

U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Office of Freight Management and Operations, Freight Performance Measurement Program, special tabulation, 2012.

 


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