• Civil 3D

Model a road corridor

Specify superelevation and model a road corridor in Civil 3D.


00:03

In this session,

00:04

we will use the alignments profiles and assemblies

00:07

we developed previously to create the corridor model.

00:11

We

00:11

will demonstrate a few procedures when modeling the

00:13

corridor that we can implement on other projects.

00:18

Before we get into the corridor,

00:19

there are a few details that we need to verify regarding our assembly.

00:24

We need to be sure that we have enabled super elevation for the lanes.

00:28

We can select the lane and specify that we want to use super elevation

00:33

and for each lane, we can identify if the lanes are left or right or inside or outside.

00:39

We can also determine the direction of the slope

00:42

either toward the crown or away from the crown.

00:45

This will depend on our assembly configuration

00:49

and the method of super elevation used in the corridor.

00:53

The next item to consider prior to creating a

00:55

corridor is to apply super elevation to the alignment.

00:59

First, we need to apply a design speed to that alignment if we have not already done.

01:04

So

01:04

here we set the design speed at 45 miles an hour.

01:08

We will select the alignment again and choose super elevation from the menu

01:12

and we can choose to calculate. Now,

01:15

we have a few choices for this corridor.

01:17

In this case, we will choose divided crown with median.

01:21

We can also modify the pivot method for this. We'll choose the center

01:25

where the crown will be between the two lanes.

01:28

Next, we'll define the number of lanes and the lane widths.

01:31

And then we can also control the outside shoulder and the super elevation criteria.

01:36

And we will choose the library that is included with civil 3d.

01:39

But we could choose a custom file here if we needed to.

01:43

When the calculation is complete,

01:45

we can view the results and modify the stations and slopes if needed.

01:49

We can also see that those items have been labeled in plain view.

01:53

Now, let's jump into the corridor here.

01:55

We'll specify the name which baseline alignment we want to use

01:59

the profile and the assembly that we'll use in the corridor.

02:02

We'll choose the target surface and then select. Ok.

02:05

Now keep in mind we can modify any of these items later on. If we need to

02:09

within the corridor parameters,

02:12

we will set up items like the frequency of the sections and some of the key targets

02:17

in frequency.

02:18

One of the items that I like to choose is to apply by curvature to the curves.

02:24

This helps to model the corridor more accurately

02:26

and avoids a segmented look in tighter areas.

02:30

Surface is already defined for our target.

02:33

And in this case,

02:34

we don't have any feature lines or alignments to define our pavement lines.

02:38

Once we run the corridor, we want to inspect it and make any necessary revisions.

02:42

We can view it with the section editor.

02:45

This gives us plan profile section and assembly view of the corridor

02:50

and we can also modify these windows. But for now, we'll use this format.

02:55

So in the curved section,

02:56

we see that we have defined our assembly

02:59

lanes incorrectly by looking at the super elevation.

03:02

So we can fix that easily by redefining the parameters in the assembly.

03:06

In this case, we need to make it toward the crown instead of away.

03:11

Then we rebuilt the corridor

03:13

and those lanes much look much better.

03:16

Now,

03:16

let's look at some of the other areas of

03:17

the corridor and verify that they are correct as well

03:22

and those also look pretty good.

03:23

So let's change the viewport configuration to three windows so that

03:28

we can zoom in on the section view by zooming in.

03:30

We see that that looks pretty good so we can move on to the next corridor.

03:34

So we want to model this access road so that we

03:37

can eventually set up the intersections for the other corridors.

03:40

For the purposes of this demo.

03:42

We won't use super elevation on this segment,

03:45

but we would do the same thing that we did.

03:47

Previously,

03:48

we will apply the assembly with the retaining walls for this corridor

03:52

and then we'll define the corridor elements

03:56

and update the frequency

03:58

here. We actually want to divide some of the regions near the intersection.

04:03

So we'll turn off the target surface at the intersection.

04:07

So once those are all set, we'll run the corridor

04:10

and now we'll view the results using the section editor here as well.

04:16

Once we have these corridors, let's add the east and west alignments.

04:21

We'll add super elevation as an undivided crowned roadway this time,

04:26

similar steps as the previous alignment by defining

04:28

some of these items for the calculation.

04:32

And with a reverse curve,

04:33

Civil 3d has identified a number of conflicts

04:36

or overlaps in the super elevation calculation.

04:39

So we can either manually adjust these stations or we can select these right,

04:43

click on them

04:44

and choose automatically resolve overlap

04:47

and then these values will be recalculated to accommodate the reverse curve.

04:52

And then we'll also calculate the super elevation for the east alignment.

04:56

Now, in this corridor,

04:57

there are a few items that we want to

04:59

do that are slightly different than the previous corridors.

05:02

We will choose the west alignment as the baseline in the West Assembly.

05:07

Then we'll split the region up as we did previously

05:10

and then update those targets

05:13

once we have that, let's run that so that we can view the limits.

05:16

This seems to be ok for now, we have quite a bit of cut in this particular section,

05:20

but let's go back into the corridor parameters

05:23

and add the east alignment

05:26

and we'll do this by adding a baseline.

05:29

So we need to determine the profile

05:31

and the assembly for this baseline.

05:34

And for this part, we'll add the East assembly

05:37

and we can split the regions here as well,

05:41

then rerun the corridor

05:45

as we did before we can check the results in the section editor.

05:49

So it looks like we do need to make some changes

05:51

and then rebuild the corridor

05:54

in cases where we need to redefine the assembly parameters.

05:58

We can right click on the assembly and go to the assembly properties.

06:02

This window gives us the same ability to

06:04

edit the sub assemblies as the properties window.

06:07

So if the section looks incorrect,

06:09

we'll likely need to modify the super elevation either inside

06:13

or outside or we'll need to modify the slope direction

06:16

and that looks to be correct. Now,

06:19

we then choose the other baseline that we

06:21

want to track along and then view those results

06:26

again, we can make any needed corrections as we move along the corridor.

06:33

Everything looks to be in good order here. So let's move to the next one.

06:37

Now, the next corridor utilizes the offset alignments that we created previously.

06:42

So we want to use feature lines or poly lines to control the rays medium locations.

06:48

We could use alignments

06:50

but this line work will be sufficient.

06:52

So we set up the assembly previously with a link

06:55

between the southbound and the northbound lanes with a median

06:59

and with median turn lanes.

07:01

We also really need to note the direction of the stationing. In this case,

07:06

southbound is on the right side of the assembly.

07:09

Once we've set those items previously discussed, such as frequency and targets,

07:16

we can now focus on some of the other targets.

07:18

This is where identifying the lane names is critical.

07:22

First, we'll set the offset alignment as the northbound offset alignment

07:27

and the profile as the northbound offset alignment profile.

07:32

So let's run the corridor now

07:34

to verify that we're in the right place with the alignments and with the lanes.

07:39

So by inspecting those look to be pretty good,

07:42

we also have an additional assembly without the raised

07:44

median that we intend to use near the intersection.

07:48

So we can split the regions and then set the corridor with the additional assembly

07:54

for the median control lines.

07:57

We'll choose

07:58

items from our drawing

08:03

here. We can pick the poly lines that represent the median on both sides.

08:08

This is where knowing our right and left lanes

08:12

and the southbound and northbound lanes is vital.

08:16

So the median looks to be pretty good looks like it's modeled it fairly well.

08:20

We will need to update the intersection area. But for now, the region looks ok

08:26

south of the intersection, we'll do the same thing

08:28

where we identify the control lines with poly lines from our drawing.

08:34

Now, at the end of the corridor, we extended past the median.

08:37

We can truncate this by revising the region's station limits.

08:42

And now that looks pretty good too.

08:44

Now, in the section editor,

08:46

we want to look at the transition areas

08:47

to ensure that our assembly is behaving correctly.

08:50

The median looks pretty good,

08:52

but we do have a gap near that intersection.

08:55

We can resolve this in a couple of ways.

08:58

We can either create poly lines between the sections to target horizontally.

09:03

But one thing that we need to consider is the elevation,

09:07

The assembly will target this in plan view,

09:09

but it will project the slopes as they are set.

09:12

And in this case, we can see that we are off

09:15

the other way that we can resolve. This

09:18

is to use the center line alignment

09:20

as a horizontal and vertical control.

09:24

So once we set that

09:26

we can inspect the section view and that has been drawn correctly,

09:30

and we can even see that it has corrected the slope to

09:33

the target center line alignment and filled in those gaps nicely.

09:37

The final element is the turn lane for the northbound side.

09:40

And we have a polyline that represents the edge of

09:42

travel lane that we will include in the corridor.

09:45

Again, we need to pick the lane that will target the line.

09:49

Then we select the line from our C AD file and we rebuild the corridor.

09:53

The section view shows the lanes nicely.

09:56

So these are some of the typical methods for creating corridors.

10:00

Oftentimes we'll have to use a combination of these workflows

10:04

to get the exact results that we're looking for.

Video transcript

00:03

In this session,

00:04

we will use the alignments profiles and assemblies

00:07

we developed previously to create the corridor model.

00:11

We

00:11

will demonstrate a few procedures when modeling the

00:13

corridor that we can implement on other projects.

00:18

Before we get into the corridor,

00:19

there are a few details that we need to verify regarding our assembly.

00:24

We need to be sure that we have enabled super elevation for the lanes.

00:28

We can select the lane and specify that we want to use super elevation

00:33

and for each lane, we can identify if the lanes are left or right or inside or outside.

00:39

We can also determine the direction of the slope

00:42

either toward the crown or away from the crown.

00:45

This will depend on our assembly configuration

00:49

and the method of super elevation used in the corridor.

00:53

The next item to consider prior to creating a

00:55

corridor is to apply super elevation to the alignment.

00:59

First, we need to apply a design speed to that alignment if we have not already done.

01:04

So

01:04

here we set the design speed at 45 miles an hour.

01:08

We will select the alignment again and choose super elevation from the menu

01:12

and we can choose to calculate. Now,

01:15

we have a few choices for this corridor.

01:17

In this case, we will choose divided crown with median.

01:21

We can also modify the pivot method for this. We'll choose the center

01:25

where the crown will be between the two lanes.

01:28

Next, we'll define the number of lanes and the lane widths.

01:31

And then we can also control the outside shoulder and the super elevation criteria.

01:36

And we will choose the library that is included with civil 3d.

01:39

But we could choose a custom file here if we needed to.

01:43

When the calculation is complete,

01:45

we can view the results and modify the stations and slopes if needed.

01:49

We can also see that those items have been labeled in plain view.

01:53

Now, let's jump into the corridor here.

01:55

We'll specify the name which baseline alignment we want to use

01:59

the profile and the assembly that we'll use in the corridor.

02:02

We'll choose the target surface and then select. Ok.

02:05

Now keep in mind we can modify any of these items later on. If we need to

02:09

within the corridor parameters,

02:12

we will set up items like the frequency of the sections and some of the key targets

02:17

in frequency.

02:18

One of the items that I like to choose is to apply by curvature to the curves.

02:24

This helps to model the corridor more accurately

02:26

and avoids a segmented look in tighter areas.

02:30

Surface is already defined for our target.

02:33

And in this case,

02:34

we don't have any feature lines or alignments to define our pavement lines.

02:38

Once we run the corridor, we want to inspect it and make any necessary revisions.

02:42

We can view it with the section editor.

02:45

This gives us plan profile section and assembly view of the corridor

02:50

and we can also modify these windows. But for now, we'll use this format.

02:55

So in the curved section,

02:56

we see that we have defined our assembly

02:59

lanes incorrectly by looking at the super elevation.

03:02

So we can fix that easily by redefining the parameters in the assembly.

03:06

In this case, we need to make it toward the crown instead of away.

03:11

Then we rebuilt the corridor

03:13

and those lanes much look much better.

03:16

Now,

03:16

let's look at some of the other areas of

03:17

the corridor and verify that they are correct as well

03:22

and those also look pretty good.

03:23

So let's change the viewport configuration to three windows so that

03:28

we can zoom in on the section view by zooming in.

03:30

We see that that looks pretty good so we can move on to the next corridor.

03:34

So we want to model this access road so that we

03:37

can eventually set up the intersections for the other corridors.

03:40

For the purposes of this demo.

03:42

We won't use super elevation on this segment,

03:45

but we would do the same thing that we did.

03:47

Previously,

03:48

we will apply the assembly with the retaining walls for this corridor

03:52

and then we'll define the corridor elements

03:56

and update the frequency

03:58

here. We actually want to divide some of the regions near the intersection.

04:03

So we'll turn off the target surface at the intersection.

04:07

So once those are all set, we'll run the corridor

04:10

and now we'll view the results using the section editor here as well.

04:16

Once we have these corridors, let's add the east and west alignments.

04:21

We'll add super elevation as an undivided crowned roadway this time,

04:26

similar steps as the previous alignment by defining

04:28

some of these items for the calculation.

04:32

And with a reverse curve,

04:33

Civil 3d has identified a number of conflicts

04:36

or overlaps in the super elevation calculation.

04:39

So we can either manually adjust these stations or we can select these right,

04:43

click on them

04:44

and choose automatically resolve overlap

04:47

and then these values will be recalculated to accommodate the reverse curve.

04:52

And then we'll also calculate the super elevation for the east alignment.

04:56

Now, in this corridor,

04:57

there are a few items that we want to

04:59

do that are slightly different than the previous corridors.

05:02

We will choose the west alignment as the baseline in the West Assembly.

05:07

Then we'll split the region up as we did previously

05:10

and then update those targets

05:13

once we have that, let's run that so that we can view the limits.

05:16

This seems to be ok for now, we have quite a bit of cut in this particular section,

05:20

but let's go back into the corridor parameters

05:23

and add the east alignment

05:26

and we'll do this by adding a baseline.

05:29

So we need to determine the profile

05:31

and the assembly for this baseline.

05:34

And for this part, we'll add the East assembly

05:37

and we can split the regions here as well,

05:41

then rerun the corridor

05:45

as we did before we can check the results in the section editor.

05:49

So it looks like we do need to make some changes

05:51

and then rebuild the corridor

05:54

in cases where we need to redefine the assembly parameters.

05:58

We can right click on the assembly and go to the assembly properties.

06:02

This window gives us the same ability to

06:04

edit the sub assemblies as the properties window.

06:07

So if the section looks incorrect,

06:09

we'll likely need to modify the super elevation either inside

06:13

or outside or we'll need to modify the slope direction

06:16

and that looks to be correct. Now,

06:19

we then choose the other baseline that we

06:21

want to track along and then view those results

06:26

again, we can make any needed corrections as we move along the corridor.

06:33

Everything looks to be in good order here. So let's move to the next one.

06:37

Now, the next corridor utilizes the offset alignments that we created previously.

06:42

So we want to use feature lines or poly lines to control the rays medium locations.

06:48

We could use alignments

06:50

but this line work will be sufficient.

06:52

So we set up the assembly previously with a link

06:55

between the southbound and the northbound lanes with a median

06:59

and with median turn lanes.

07:01

We also really need to note the direction of the stationing. In this case,

07:06

southbound is on the right side of the assembly.

07:09

Once we've set those items previously discussed, such as frequency and targets,

07:16

we can now focus on some of the other targets.

07:18

This is where identifying the lane names is critical.

07:22

First, we'll set the offset alignment as the northbound offset alignment

07:27

and the profile as the northbound offset alignment profile.

07:32

So let's run the corridor now

07:34

to verify that we're in the right place with the alignments and with the lanes.

07:39

So by inspecting those look to be pretty good,

07:42

we also have an additional assembly without the raised

07:44

median that we intend to use near the intersection.

07:48

So we can split the regions and then set the corridor with the additional assembly

07:54

for the median control lines.

07:57

We'll choose

07:58

items from our drawing

08:03

here. We can pick the poly lines that represent the median on both sides.

08:08

This is where knowing our right and left lanes

08:12

and the southbound and northbound lanes is vital.

08:16

So the median looks to be pretty good looks like it's modeled it fairly well.

08:20

We will need to update the intersection area. But for now, the region looks ok

08:26

south of the intersection, we'll do the same thing

08:28

where we identify the control lines with poly lines from our drawing.

08:34

Now, at the end of the corridor, we extended past the median.

08:37

We can truncate this by revising the region's station limits.

08:42

And now that looks pretty good too.

08:44

Now, in the section editor,

08:46

we want to look at the transition areas

08:47

to ensure that our assembly is behaving correctly.

08:50

The median looks pretty good,

08:52

but we do have a gap near that intersection.

08:55

We can resolve this in a couple of ways.

08:58

We can either create poly lines between the sections to target horizontally.

09:03

But one thing that we need to consider is the elevation,

09:07

The assembly will target this in plan view,

09:09

but it will project the slopes as they are set.

09:12

And in this case, we can see that we are off

09:15

the other way that we can resolve. This

09:18

is to use the center line alignment

09:20

as a horizontal and vertical control.

09:24

So once we set that

09:26

we can inspect the section view and that has been drawn correctly,

09:30

and we can even see that it has corrected the slope to

09:33

the target center line alignment and filled in those gaps nicely.

09:37

The final element is the turn lane for the northbound side.

09:40

And we have a polyline that represents the edge of

09:42

travel lane that we will include in the corridor.

09:45

Again, we need to pick the lane that will target the line.

09:49

Then we select the line from our C AD file and we rebuild the corridor.

09:53

The section view shows the lanes nicely.

09:56

So these are some of the typical methods for creating corridors.

10:00

Oftentimes we'll have to use a combination of these workflows

10:04

to get the exact results that we're looking for.

Was this information helpful?