Technical Memorandum

DATE:   December 21, 2017

TO:         Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization
FROM:   William S. Kuttner
RE:         Weight and Height Restrictions that Impact Truck Travel

1          introduction

This memorandum presents information about bridges in the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) area that have signs restricting the weight or height of vehicles permitted to pass over or under them. MassDOT personnel monitor these weight and height restrictions, along with a bridge’s physical condition, or rating, and summarize them as inspection reports in MassDOT’s internal database. However, the physical condition or rating of bridges is not the direct concern of this study.

The concern of this study is that truck restrictions cause trucks that are otherwise fully compliant with Massachusetts and Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) size guidelines to use more circuitous routes than necessary to reach their various commercial destinations. Forced circuitous truck travel increases expenses for freight carriers and customers, increases the total environmental impact for a given level of freight traffic, and increases the negative impacts on local residents and communities.

This study characterizes the severity of height and weight restrictions on trucks in the MPO region. The information developed will be used to evaluate projects considered for inclusion in two MPO planning documents: the Long-Range Transportation Plan (LRTP) and the Transportation Improvement Program (TIP). It is also possible that, at some point, MPO staff might incorporate the severity of these restrictions into its regional travel demand model.

The MPO has defined a set of six goals used for developing both the LRTP and TIP, and two of these goals relate directly to this study: capacity management/mobility and system preservation. For capacity management/mobility, projects may be awarded points if they improve the movement of trucks; which eliminating or reducing the severity of a height or weight restriction clearly achieves. For the system preservation goal, replacing a bridge that is structurally deficient or functionally obsolete also merits points. The presence of a vehicle size restriction is one aspect of a bridge being substandard, and can inform the evaluation and award of points.

This study first discusses weight restrictions and then discusses limited vertical clearances. These sections briefly present the applicable road use regulations and signage guidelines, and then describe the proposed severity metrics. Important roads in the MPO region that physically restrict trucks are listed in descending order of severity. A final section contains maps of these locations.

2          Weight Restrictions

2.1      Regulations and Signage

Regulations in Massachusetts

States may set their own road use regulations, but these tend to be similar throughout the country. For the most common arrangements of truck axles, the maximum weights of loaded trucks allowed on Massachusetts roads without a special permit are:

Trucks weighing more than these limits may be allowed to travel in Massachusetts with an applicable permit, but such oversized vehicles are not a concern of this study. Detailed vehicle size regulations and permit applications are easily obtained on the MassDOT website.1 The following examples provide a freight transportation context for these maximum weights:

A heavy-duty dump truck will have three axles, with the wheels doubled on the two rear axles. This ten-wheel configuration is used extensively for cargoes such as cement, home heating oil, garbage, beverages, and heavy equipment such as fire engines.

An empty dump truck may have a “curb weight” of 12 tons, which includes the truck, fuel, lubricants, and driver. A full payload of gravel may weigh 24 tons, keeping the loaded truck at less than the 36.5-ton limit. If the cargo is wet sand, the truck can be only partially filled because wet sand is heavier than gravel.

Two-axle trucks with their typical cargoes seldom approach the 23-ton maximum. Every truck has a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR), which is the maximum fully loaded weight up to which each truck is permitted to operate. Very few two-axle trucks, if any, have GVWRs greater than 23 tons.

Weight Restriction Signage

If a state or local road authority determines that a bridge should not be used by trucks loaded to the maximum allowable weight, the authority may post a weight limit sign. The design and placement of weight limit signs are described in the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD).2 The most common type of sign is shown in Figure 1 below.


1 MassDOT website http://www.massdot.state.ma.us/highway/DoingBusinessWithUs/PermitsRoadAccessPrograms/CommercialTransport.aspx.

2 Federal Highway Administration, Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 2012, Section 2B.59.

 

Figure 1
Example of a Sign Restricting the Weight of Trucks

This figure is an image of a sign posted on a telephone pole adjacent a suburban roadway.

Source: GoogleEarth.

The sign depicts silhouettes of three trucks representing the three most common axle configurations: two-axle trucks, three-axle single-unit trucks, and five-axle tractor and semi-trailer combinations. Next to each silhouette is an integer informing truck drivers of the maximum total weight permitted for each axle configuration. The signs are posted at locations where trucks can choose a different route or reverse direction.

Truck operators are expected to know the total weight of their vehicle and payload. The GVWR and curb weight are affixed to the truck and the payload can be calculated when the vehicle is loaded or unloaded. Compliant trucks begin each leg of travel weighing within the limits of both the truck’s GVWR and the state maximum allowed weight for the truck’s configuration. If a driver encounters a bridge with a weight restriction, it should be clear whether the driver needs to find an alternate route. Upon making a delivery, the truck’s total weight is re-calculated and the weight-restricted bridge may be usable by the lightened truck.


2.2      The Severity of Weight Restrictions in the MPO Region

Characterizing the Severity of Weight Restrictions

The Boston Region MPO’s current LRTP summarizes the region’s transportation needs and devotes a section to system preservation.3 The LRTP reports that there are a total of 2,866 bridges in the Boston MPO region, including the individual spans that comprise larger bridges or viaducts. Of these, 154 are considered structurally deficient. A bridge may be rated as structurally deficient for any of a number of reasons, and only 37 structurally deficient bridges have posted weight restrictions.

About 100 bridges in the region have posted weight restrictions. Most of these bridges are not structurally deficient but have a posted weight restriction because they were built to different design standards. This study focuses on 57 of these bridges on roads—not including parkways which prohibit trucks—that are represented in the MPO’s travel demand model. These roads generally have a functional class of at least “collector.” About one-third of these bridges are located on numbered routes, and these 18 locations are shown in Table 1.

For the purposes of this study, an estimate of the overall severity of a weight restriction has been calculated for each bridge. The typical weight limit sign has different weights depending on the number of axles. The relationship of these three weights depends upon the design of a bridge and the placement of its support structures. Because truck traffic contains a blend of truck sizes and axle configurations, it is helpful if the impact of a weight restriction can be expressed with a single number for comparison with other bridges.

The estimate of the overall severity of a weight restriction used here is referred to in this study as a “safe off-load per axle” and it appears in Tables 1 and 2 for each weight-restricted bridge. The safe off-load per axle is an estimate of how many tons per axle below the state maximum a truck would need to weigh in order to be permitted to cross the weight-restricted bridge; and the bridges in Table 1 are listed in descending order of this measure.

The most severely restricted bridge—Route 62 (Main Street) in Concord where it crosses the Sudbury River—can serve as an example. The safe off-load per axle for this bridge has been calculated as 8.5 tons per axle. A three-axle truck in Massachusetts can weigh 36.5 tons at most, but the bridge allows three-axle trucks to weigh only 11 tons. The difference between these two weights is 25.5 tons, which is 8.5 tons per axle, the amount shown in Table 1. For two-axle trucks the value would be 8 tons to get from 23 down to 7 tons, and for five-axle trucks it would be 6.5 tons to get from 49.5 down to 17 tons. Table 1 presents only the highest value of the three off-load calculations.

TABLE 1
Posted Weight Restrictions on Numbered Routes


Town Name

 Route

Street Name

Feature Crossed

Weight Limit Posting

Safe Off-Load

 

 

 

 

2-Axle

3-Axle

5-Axle

per Axle

Concord

62

Main Street

Sudbury River

7

11

17

8.5

Bedford

4

Great Road

Shawsheen River

13

17

25

6.5

Revere

145

Revere Beach Pkwy.

Blue Line

14

17

24

6.5

Bedford

225

Bedford Road

Concord River

17

20

36

5.5

Topsfield

97

High Street

Ipswich River

15

21

32

5.2

Middleton

62

Maple street

Ipswich River

14

23

36

4.5

Marshfield

3A

Main Street

South River

17

23

36

4.5

Littleton

119

Great Road

Beaver Brook

17

23

36

4.5

Cambridge

2A

Massachusetts Ave.

Memorial Drive

18

23

36

4.5

Wilmington

129

Lowell Street

Interstate 93

18

23

38

4.5

Concord

2

Union Turnpike

Nashoba Brook

20

23

40

4.5

Hingham

3A

Lincoln Street

Back River

20

25

32

3.8

Waltham

US 20

Main Street

Fitchburg Line

20

25

36

3.8

Arlington

2

Lake Street

20

25

38

3.8

Hudson

85

Washington Street

Assabet River

20

25

40

3.8

Gloucester

128

Annisquam River

20

25

40

3.8

Gloucester

128

Concord Street

20

25

40

3.8

Framingham

126

School Street

Cochituate Brook

19

30

47

2.2

 

For all the weight-restricted bridges, the three-axle trucks require the greatest number of tons of off-load per axle, or in a few instances nearly the greatest. This circumstance results largely from the overall state weight limits described above. The maximum allowed weight of a three-axle truck is 36.5 tons, more than 12 tons per axle, and greater than the maximum weights per-axle of the other axle configurations. Starting at this higher allowed per-axle weight, crossing a weight-restricted bridge almost always requires a greater per-axle weight reduction for a three-axle truck than for other configurations.


General Observations about Freight and Weight Restrictions

It is understandable that three-axle trucks would be the most affected by weight-restricted bridges. These types of trucks are placed into service specifically to safely transport heavy loads, and efficient utilization often requires loading them to nearly the legal limit. Two-axle trucks and five-axle semi-trailer combinations often carry less-dense products and the trucks are not always full.

Route 62 in Concord can again serve as an example. A large three-axle dump truck would not be able to cross the Sudbury River even if it were empty. In contrast, the 7-ton limit for two-axle trucks would allow many UPS, FedEx, and small six-wheeled trucks to cross. Heavier two-axle trucks would still need to find alternative routes, depending on their load.

Three-axle and two-axle trucks often serve very different freight markets with significantly different travel patterns. For instance, heavy dump trucks, cement trucks, and trucks delivering diesel fuel often travel to and from construction sites, sometimes on specific routes defined in advance during the environmental permitting process. A preferred route for these vehicles may be unavailable because of a weight restriction, forcing use of more circuitous routes. When a construction project no longer requires heavy vehicle deliveries, any nearby weight restrictions may not be a problem for ongoing commercial activity.

Two-axle trucks often serve steady customers on regular pickup or delivery schedules. If a weight restriction prevents use of an otherwise efficient route, trucks may use a less desirable circuitous route; or if the truck operator has a fleet with different sized vehicles, a smaller vehicle may be assigned to serve customers near the weight-restricted bridge. In this freight market characterized by regular deliveries, the 10-wheeled beverage delivery truck is most affected by weight restrictions.

Planning Implications of Weight Restrictions

The motor freight industry is very adaptable. Comparatively efficient alternate routes are identified and utilized wherever all or some trucks are restricted from preferred routes. Some otherwise efficient routes are truck-restricted as a consequence of state or local policies. This is not the case with weight restrictions: If the bridge were to be rebuilt, it would accommodate all trucks that comply with the statewide weight standards.

Of the bridges cited in Table 1, the weight limits for Route 62 in Concord are outliers. The average safe off-load per axle for the bridges in Table 1 is 4.7 tons per axle. These bridges can accommodate most trucks that serve regional commerce; the greatest inconvenience would be to three-axle trucks that support construction activities.

There are an additional 39 weight-restricted bridges that are not on numbered routes, divided about evenly between arterials and collectors; these are listed in Table 2 in descending order of safe off-load per axle. The grouping of weight-restricted bridges into numbered and non-numbered routes is arbitrary. However, the weight restrictions on the bridges in Table 2 tend to be more severe, with an average safe off-load per axle of 6.1 tons. Seven of these bridges have weight restrictions that are more severe than that of Route 62 in Concord, the most severe restriction shown in Table 1.

Some of the locations in Table 2 are on important freight corridors. The first location with a 3.8-ton safe off-load per axle is Neponset Valley Parkway in Boston’s Readville neighborhood. Until several years ago this was the principal access route for trucks serving the regional distribution center of the Stop and Shop supermarket chain.

The five-axle semi-trailer combination is the most important truck type serving large supermarket chains, and these trucks were loaded within Neponset Valley Parkway’s 40-ton limit, while Stop and Shop operated in Readville. Stop and Shop has since moved to a larger distribution facility in Freetown, near Fall River. It is not known whether Stop and Shop has changed its truck-loading practices now that it can load trucks to the maximum 49.5 tons.

To understand fully the impact of weight restrictions, it would be necessary to have credible estimates of both the numbers of trucks that currently use these bridges as well as the numbers of trucks that would choose to use them if there were no weight restriction. These data can be developed for an individual bridge if it is possible to invest the time and resources required for detailed fieldwork and network analysis.

An alternative method would be to use a calibrated truck travel demand model, if available. General comparisons of use and impacts of weight-restricted bridges could then be estimated. These first-pass comparisons could then inform any subsequent fieldwork and network analysis. The truck modelling capabilities of the MPO’s travel demand model set have advanced to the point where region-wide analysis of truck restriction impacts may be possible in the near future.

About 12 of the weight-restriction signs discussed here have been added or updated since 2007. However, bridges with weight restrictions are not necessarily deteriorating or under-maintained. Bridges were built to the standards of their time, and if they are rebuilt it will be to today’s standards. If the existing bridge is properly maintained, the weight restriction could be in force for the indefinite future.

TABLE 2
Other Locations with Posted Weight Restrictions


Town

Street

Feature

Weight Limit Posting

Safe Off-

Name

Name

Crossed

2-Axle

3-Axle

5-Axle

Load per Axle

Wilmington

Butters Row

Lowell Line

5

5

5

10.5

Natick

Boden Lane

Worcester Line

6

6

6

10.2

Weston

Merriam Street

Fitchburg Line

6

6

6

10.2

Framingham

Beaver Street

Beaver Dam Brook

5

8

12

9.5

Maynard

Walnut Street

Assabet River

7

8

12

9.5

Framingham

Winter Street

Sudbury River

5

9

14

9.2

Boston

Granite Avenue

Neponset River

6

11

17

8.5

Ipswich

Waldingfield Road

Newburyport Line

6

12

18

8.5

Beverly

Bridge Street

Bass River

8

12

19

8.2

Natick

Marion Street

Worcester Line

10

14

20

7.5

Framingham

Winter Street

Worcester Line

12

14

18

7.5

Marblehead

Village Street

Abandoned rail line

12

14

21

7.5

Framingham

Central Street

Sudbury River

14

15

18

7.2

Framingham

Main Street

Sudbury River

15

15

15

7.2

Hopkinton

Fruit Street

Worcester Line

9

16

26

7.0

Beverly

Kernwood Avenue

Danvers River

11

16

22

6.8

Hudson

Cox Street

Assabet River

16

17

17

6.5

Somerville

Webster Avenue

Fitchburg Line

11

21

33

6.0

Hudson

Forest Avenue

Assabet River

20

20

20

5.9

Concord

Commonwealth Ave

Fort Pond Brook

13

19

27

5.8

Stow

Sudbury Road

Assabet River

14

20

32

5.5

Peabody

Endicott Street

inactive rail line

16

21

32

5.2

Lexington

Hartwell Avenue

Kiln Brook

17

21

36

5.2

Boston

West Second Street

S. Boston Bypass Rd

16

22

35

4.8

Walpole

School Street

Memorial Pond Outlet

16

23

36

4.5

Waltham

Newton Street

Fitchburg Line

17

23

34

4.5

Peabody

Warren Street

Inactive rail line

17

23

36

4.5

Needham

Central Avenue

Charles River

15

25

40

4.0

Boston

Neponset Valley Pkwy

Neponset River

17

25

40

3.8

Milford

Fisk Mill Road

Mill River

18

25

40

3.8

Boston

Forest Hills Drive

Cemetery Road

20

25

32

3.8

Wayland

Oak Street

Interstate  90

20

25

33

3.8

Waltham

Farwell Street

Charles River

20

25

36

3.8

Weymouth

Front Street

Route 3

20

25

36

3.8

Framingham

Mount Wayte Ave

CSX rail line

20

25

36

3.8

Cohasset

Atlantic Avenue

Little Harbor Inlet

20

25

40

3.8

Walpole

Coney Street

Interstate 95

20

25

40

3.8

Boston

Meridian Street

Chelsea River

20

25

40

3.8

Medford

Winthrop Street

Mystic River

20 

25 

40 

3.8


3          limited vertical clearances

3.1      Regulations and Signage

Regulations in Massachusetts

In order to use Massachusetts roads without a special permit, the tallest a vehicle may be is 13 feet 6 inches. Vehicles exceeding this height may be allowed to travel in Massachusetts with an applicable permit obtained at the same MassDOT website cited above for overweight permits.

The common box-type semi-trailer, referred to in the industry as a “dry van,” is typically 53 feet long, 8 feet 6 inches wide, and 13 feet 6 inches high. Figure 2 shows a modern dry van that is equipped with aerodynamic “skirts” to both improve fuel efficiency and offer some level of protection for bicycle riders in urban environments.

FIGURE 2
Modern 53-foot Dry Van

This figure is an image of a commonly used truck trailer. The length of the truck is stenciled on its side.

Safe vertical clearances must exceed the maximum vehicle height to allow for vehicle bouncing, unknown protuberances, or geometric effects of any change in grade at or near the bridge, referred to in roadway design as “vertical curves.” The design guidelines for new bridges recommend that bridge structures provide at least 16 feet of vertical clearance over the entire width of the roadway. Additional clearance is also recommended for new bridges in anticipation of future resurfacing.4

Vertical Clearance Signage

Requirements and recommendations for the design and placement of vertical clearance signs are described in the MUTCD5. The basic requirement of the MUTCD is that a sign of the style shown in Figure 3 be posted at any bridge with a clearance less than 12 inches above the state maximum vehicle height.


3 Boston Region MPO, Charting Progress to 2040: A Long-Range Transportation Plan for the Boston Region, 2015, http://bostonmpo.org/lrtp.

4 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, A Policy of Geometric Design of Highways and Streets, 2011.

5 Federal Highway Administration, Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, 2012, Section 2C.27.

 

FIGURE 3
Type of Sign Posted on or in Advance of a Vertical Clearance Restriction

This figure is an image of a standard diamond-shaped vertical clearance sign.

Ideally, a vertical clearance sign should indicate the actual clearance rounded down to the nearest inch. The MUTCD, however, makes some allowance for posting signs that indicate less clearance than is actually available. In certain climates, temperature change and frost action can appreciably affect the roadway surface, and the available clearance indicated may be reduced by as much as to three inches to reflect this. Additional inches can be subtracted from the clearance sign if a fresh coat of asphalt will be applied at some future point.

The application of vertical clearance signage with respect to these guidelines and tolerances is illustrated in Figure 4. The Southeast Expressway, Interstate 93, was built in the 1950s to earlier design standards, and several of the original bridges are still in use. If the vertical clearance under Dorchester Avenue were 13 feet 6.9 inches, the sign would be technically correct and any prudent driver would seek an alternate route rather than risk damaging a standard 13‑foot 6‑inch dry van with as little as a 0.9‑inch bounce.

FIGURE 4
Interstate 93 under Dorchester Avenue

This figure is an image of traffic on Interstate 93 passing under a bridge. A vertical clearance sign of the type shown in Figure 3 is posted next to Interstate 93 just before the Dorchester Avenue overpass.

The actual clearance is probably between 13 feet 9 inches and 14 feet. If a second coat of asphalt has been applied, the clearance might be 13 feet 9 inches. If old asphalt has been removed and a new single layer has been applied, the clearance may be 14 feet. The many standard 13‑foot 6‑inch dry vans using the Southeast Expressway are able to pass beneath this underpass without incident if they are traveling the speed limit and have no protuberances. For the purposes of this study truck travel is only considered to be impacted if the vertical clearance sign indicates less than 13 feet 6 inches of clearance.

Vertical clearance signs may be placed on or near bridges, and at nearby intersections to allow vehicles to choose an alternate route. The type of sign shown in Figure 5 may be posted on the bridge structure and is especially appropriate if the bridge is a long arch and the clearance needs to be indicated for individual lanes.

FIGURE 5
Type of Sign that May be Posted on the Bridge Structure

This figure is an image of a rectangular vertical clearance sign.

3.2      Impact on Truck Traffic

Crashes by Large Vehicles at Low-Clearance Bridges

The MassDOT crash database contains 222 reports of trucks and buses with six or more wheels that hit a low-clearance bridge during the 13 years from 2002 to 2014. The completeness of crash reporting to MassDOT varies between law enforcement agencies and jurisdictions. Also, crash reports prepared at the crash sites often focus on the data needs of law enforcement and insurers, so some information useful to planners may be sketchy. However, taken altogether these crash reports can reveal the potential benefit of reconstructing bridges to accommodate all vehicles.

Almost all truck and bus drivers are fully cognizant of their vehicle size and find appropriate routes to their destinations. Only rarely does the operator of a large vehicle lose situational awareness and drive the vehicle on an impassable road. If the driver realizes the mistake in time, the driver could avoid a crash. If not, the truck would hit the low-clearance bridge and become one of the statistics summarized in Table 3.

The bridges in Table 3 are listed in descending order of the number of reported crashes. Only 197 crashes are listed in Table 3 because the 25 crashes that occurred on the Storrow Drive, Soldiers Field Road, and Memorial Drive parkway systems are not shown, and are not part of this study. These roads were designed as a truck-free subsystem of the regional road system and upgrading these roads to accommodate trucks is not being considered.

The first crash location listed in Table 3 is where the Franklin commuter rail line crosses over East Street in Westwood just south of Interchange 15 in Dedham, where US Route I meets I‑95. The fact that 33 drivers of large vehicles either lost situational awareness, or possibly decided to “chance it,” suggests that there are a number of truck destinations reached via this route, which the inattentive drivers are trying to serve. If this overpass were to allow use by full-sized dry vans, a substantial number of trucks now precluded from this route might find it attractive. At this time, however, it is only possible to speculate about the number and routes of large vehicles that serve nearby travel markets with today’s clearance restrictions.

Vulnerable Bridges under Highways

All of the crash locations listed in Table 3 are roadways that pass under railroad alignments except for Route 1A/Dodge Street, which experienced one crash where it crosses under Route 128 in Beverly. The features of this bridge (shown in Figure 5) help illustrate several relevant clearance issues.

TABLE 3
Reported Crashes into Low-Clearance Bridges by Large Vehicles 2002-2014


Town

 

Street

Crossing

Number of

Signed Clearance

Name

Route

Name

Feature

Crashes

Feet

Inches

Westwood

East Street

Franklin Line

33

10

6

Norwood

Morse Street

Inactive rail line

22

9

11

Weston

Park Road

Worcester Line

20

11

3

Concord

62

Main Street

Fitchburg Line

18

12

0

Southborough

85

River Street

Worcester Line

16

11

0

Canton

Bolivar Street

Stoughton Line

13

12

0

Malden

Medford Street

Haverhill Line/Orange Line

10

12

6

Walpole

West Street

Foxborough Branch

8

12

0

Lynn

Bennett Street

Inactive rail line

6

13

0

Holliston

Exchange Street

Holliston Rail Trail

5

8

0

Lynn

Silsbee Street

Rockport/Newburyport Line

5

11

0

Lexington

Grant Street

Minuteman Bikeway

4

11

3

Norwood

Lenox Street

inactive rail line

4

11

1

Norwood

Guild Street

Franklin Line

4

11

7

Arlington

Grove Street

Minuteman Bikeway

3

11

5

Arlington

Brattle Street

Minuteman Bikeway

3

11

6

Belmont

Concord Avenue

Fitchburg Line

3

10

3

Boston

Freeport Street

Old Colony Line/Red Line

3

12

0

Framingham

Grove Street

inactive freight line

3

11

8

Winchester

Cross Street

Lowell Line

3

10

4

Beverly

Pleasant Street

Rockport/Newburyport Line

2

12

0

Southborough

Willow Street

Active freight line

2

11

0

Beverly

1A

Dodge Street

Route 128

1

12

6

Lynn

Eastern Avenue

Rockport/Newburyport Line

1

13

0

Malden

Charles Street

Haverhill Line/Orange Line

1

13

3

Needham

Warren Street

Needham Line

1

11

0

Newton

Elliot Street

Riverside Green Line

1

13

1

Sharon

Canton Street

Providence Line

1

11

6

Walpole

Plimpton Street

Franklin Line

1

12

0


 

The bridge design shown in Figure 6 was widely used in the years following World War II, when express highway construction in the United States accelerated. The arch is constructed of reinforced concrete and is clad in decorative stone. Because of the age of these structures, any reconstruction might require preservation of decorative features.

The 13-foot 6-inch dry van was in widespread use at that time, and this bridge design accommodates vehicles of this size provided that they pass under the center of the arch. The clearance sign alerts drivers of trucks and buses that if they are in the right lane then their vehicle should be less than 12-feet 6-inches high. As mentioned above, posting clearance signs like the one shown in Figure 4 over each lane can reduce ambiguity about the available clearance.

Arched bridges fell out of favor as larger, rolled-steel girders became available. Also, where the goal at the time was to simply allow standard dry vans to reach their destinations, modern design guidelines recommend that at least 16 feet of clearance be available over the entire roadway, thereby increasing safety and facilitating movements by specially permitted oversized vehicles. At some point in this bridge’s lifecycle, a major reconstruction would need to be considered and the various design, safety and preservation issues will need to be resolved. For the purposes of this study, however, bridges like this are not considered a barrier to truck movements.

FIGURE 6
Route 1A/Dodge Street under Route 128

This figure is an image of traffic on Route 1A/Dodge Street passing under a bridge. A vertical clearance sign of the type shown in Figure 3 is posted next to Route 1A/Dodge Street just before the Route 128 overpass.

Vulnerable Bridges under Railroad Alignments

Table 3 lists 28 crash locations on roads that pass under railroad alignments. Commuter trains use 19 of these overpasses, beneath which 144 of the crashes took place. The Minuteman Bikeway uses a former rail alignment, and four of its underpasses were hit a total of 15 times. There is one freight-only overpass that was hit twice, and there are four locations on inactive rail lines that were hit a total of 35 times.

As the road network expanded and evolved, it generally has adapted to the needs of large vehicles; but this process has proved far more difficult at those locations where roads and railroads meet. The bridge in Southborough that carries the Worcester Commuter Rail Line and crosses over Route 85 (Figure 7) illustrates the difficulties of resolving clearance issues at railroad overpasses. The overpass shown in Figure 7 has been hit 16 times, and is the fifth most frequent crash location cited in Table 3. Just to the left of the image in Figure 7 is a commuter rail station, built around 2000. Despite the new station and a number of ongoing improvements to the rail line itself, the vertical clearance of this overpass remains inadequate for many types of large vehicles.

In cases like this, the railroad alignment may be considered fixed. Changes to railroad alignments are implemented almost exclusively in order to improve the alignment—for example, to straighten curves or reduce grades. Raising the Worcester Line at this point would require introducing a rise in the tracks at a point where the tracks are essentially flat; and changes to such an alignment are almost never even considered, much less implemented.

FIGURE 7
Route 85/River Street under the Worcester Commuter Rail Line

This figure is an image of traffic on Route 85/River Street passing under a bridge. A vertical clearance sign of the type shown in Figure 3 is posted next to Route  85/River Street just before the Worcester commuter rail line overpass.

If the railroad alignment is considered fixed, then lowering the road is the only available option for increasing the vertical clearance. Lowering roads can face a number of problems, some of which may lack practical solutions. These include:

In the situation in Figure 7, the road is already rising as it approaches a signalized intersection on the far side of the underpass. If the road were lowered, the approach to the intersection would be even steeper, thus reducing overall safety of the intersection. Relocation options for under-street drainage systems also may be constrained. If lowering the roadway had been practical when several capital improvements were being undertaken in this area, then clearance might have been meaningfully increased.

Other Locations with Limited Vertical Clearance

Fortunately, there are a number of bridges with limited vertical clearance that have no record of being hit by a large vehicle since 2002. Despite the lack of crashes, these bridges may be forcing attentive large-vehicle drivers to take circuitous routes. Also, there is always the chance that their luck may run out at some point. These bridges are listed in town order in Tables 4 and 5; Table 4 cites roads that pass under another road, and Table 5 lists roads that pass beneath a rail alignment.

The clearance of the first bridge in Table 4, Kernwood Avenue, is actually limited by its own trestle structure, which allows vehicles only as high as 11 feet 9 inches. The five Route 9 bridges in Newton and Wellesley all share the classic postwar arch design similar to the bridge in Figure 5. The Route 128 bridge in Danvers also has a similar arch design but without the stone cladding.

Unlike the classic arch structures that most careful truck drivers can sneak under, most of the rail bridges in Table 5 represent absolute barriers to the modern, full-sized dry van. Casual inspection of the environs of these bridges suggests that they are not on heavily used corridors or in the midst of truck-intensive travel markets. Adams Street in Malden represents an interesting case, however, in that bridges on busier parallel streets beneath the Haverhill Line were hit multiple times, as shown in Table 3.

TABLE 4
Roads under Low-Clearance Road Structures


Town Name

Street Name

Crossing Feature

Beverly

Kernwood Avenue

Bridge structure

Boston

Hallet Street

Southeast Expressway

Danvers

Route 35/High Street

Route 128

Newton

Chestnut Street

Route 9

Newton

Quinobequin Road

Route 9

Newton

Hammond Pond Parkway

Route 9

Salem

Parallel Street

Jefferson Avenue

Somerville

Dana Street

pedestrian overpass

Topsfield

Howlett Street

US 1

Wellesley

Cliff Road

Route 9

Wellesley

Weston Road

Route 9

TABLE 5
Roads under Low-Clearance Rail Alignments


Town Name

Street Name

Crossing Feature

Arlington

Forest Street

Minuteman Bikeway

Arlington

Pond Lane

Minuteman Bikeway

Beverly

Federal Street

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Boston

Hyde Park Avenue

Fairmount Line

Boston

Temple Street

Needham Line

Boston

LaGrange Street

Needham Line

Boston

Dorchester Avenue

Red Line

Boston

Conley Street

Red Line

Franklin

Acorn Place

Franklin Line

Holliston

Arch Street

Holliston Rail Trail

Malden

Adams Street

Haverhill Line/Orange Line

Medfield

Frairy Street

Active freight line

Melrose

Melrose Street

Haverhill Line

Needham

Webster Street

Needham Line

Newton

Glen Avenue

Riverside Green Line

Swampscott

Burrill Street

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Walpole

West Street

Franklin Line (mile 19.51)

Walpole

West Street

Franklin Line (mile 19.89)


 

4          mapping weight and height restrictions

For the purposes of analysis, this study organized roadways with weight and height restrictions into five tables based on the type of restriction, type of road, or crash experience. This section organizes by geography all of the bridges and overpasses that are mentioned in this study, and shows their locations on nine maps that cover most of the MPO region.

Figure 8 shows the geographic extent of each of the nine maps. The boundaries that divide the 101 MPO municipalities into eight subregions are also shown in Figure 8. The subregions of weight- and height-restricted bridges are important for MPO planning because to a large extent the needs assessment of the planning process begins at the subregion level.

Each of the nine maps has its own index, with numbered locations starting at one for each map, and numbers generally arranged from west to east. If a municipality has more than one size-restricted roadway, these are numbered sequentially, and all will appear on the same map.

The location index identifies the size-restricted road by both name and route number, if applicable. In each instance, the feature being crossed is listed as well as whether the vehicle weight or height is restricted. The location icons for weight restrictions are blue discs and for height restrictions, they are red discs. If a disc is not labeled with a number, it is identified on one of the adjacent maps.

The roads shown on these maps are included in the MPO’s travel demand model. Any road with a functional class of collector or higher is included, as well as local streets used by modeled bus services.

FIGURE 8
Map Extents Superimposed on MPO Subregions

This figure is a map of the Boston MPO region showing its eight subregions. Nine numbered rectangles are superimposed on this map indicating the geographic extent of the nine maps included in this section. 

Map 1 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Feature Crossed

Littleton

1

119

Great Road

Weight

Beaver Brook

Maynard

2

Walnut Street

Weight

Assabet River

Concord

3

2

Union Turnpike

Weight

Nashoba Brook

Concord

4

Commonwealth Avenue

Weight

Fort Pond Brook

Concord

5

62

Main Street

Clearance

Fitchburg Line

Concord

6

62

Main Street

Weight

Sudbury River

Bedford

7

225

Bedford Road

Weight

Concord River

Bedford

8

4

Great Road

Weight

Shawsheen River

Lexington

9

Hartwell Avenue

Weight

Kiln Brook

Lexington

10

Grant Street

Clearance

Minuteman Bikeway

Wilmington

11

Butters Row

Weight

Lowell Line

Wilmington

12

129

Lowell Street

Weight

Interstate 93

Winchester

13

Cross Street

Clearance

Lowell Line

Arlington

14

Forest Street

Clearance

Minuteman Bikeway

Arlington

15

Brattle Street

Clearance

Minuteman Bikeway

Arlington

16

Grove Street

Clearance

Minuteman Bikeway

Arlington

17

Pond Lane

Clearance

Minuteman Bikeway

Arlington

18

2

 

Weight

Lake Street

Dots on the map without numbers are identified on an adjacent map.

 

Map 2 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Feature Crossed

Medford

1

Winthrop Street

Weight

Mystic River

Melrose

2

Melrose Street

Clearance

Haverhill Line

Malden

3

Charles Street

Clearance

Haverhill Line/Orange Line

Malden

4

Adams Street

Clearance

Haverhill Line/Orange Line

Malden

5

Medford Street

Clearance

Haverhill Line/Orange Line

Revere

6

145

Revere Beach Parkway

Weight

Blue Line

Lynn

7

Bennett Street

Clearance

inactive freight line

Lynn

8

Silsbee Street

Clearance

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Lynn

9

Eastern Avenue

Clearance

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Swampscott

10

Burrill Street

Clearance

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Salem

11

Parallel Street

Clearance

Jefferson Avenue

Marblehead

12

 

Village Street

Weight

abandoned rail line

 

Map 3 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Feature Crossed

Middleton

1

62

Maple street

Weight

Ipswich River

Topsfield

2

Howlett Street

Clearance

US 1

Topsfield

3

97

High Street

Weight

Ipswich River

Danvers

4

35

High Street

Clearance

Route 128

Peabody

5

Endicott Street

Weight

inactive rail line

Peabody

6

Warren Street

Weight

inactive rail line

Beverly

7

Kernwood Avenue

Clearance

bridge truss structure

Beverly

7

Kernwood Avenue

Weight

Danvers River

Beverly

8

1A

Dodge Street

Clearance

Route 128

Beverly

9

Bridge Street

Weight

Bass River

Beverly

10

Federal Street

Clearance

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Beverly

11

Pleasant Street

Clearance

Rockport/Newburyport Line

Ipswich

12

Waldingfield Road

Weight

Newburyport Line

Gloucester

13

128

Weight

Concord Street

Gloucester

14

128

 

Weight

Annisquam River

 

Map 4 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Hudson

1

85

Washington Street

Weight

Hudson

2

Forest Avenue

Weight

Hudson

3

Cox Street

Weight

Stow

4

Sudbury Road

Weight

Hopkinton

5

Fruit Street

Weight

Southborough

6

85

River Street

Clearance

Southborough

7

Willow Street

Clearance

Framingham

8

Grove Street

Clearance

Framingham

9

Winter Street

Weight

Framingham

10

Winter Street

Weight

Framingham

11

Mount Wayte Avenue

Weight

Framingham

12

Main Street

Weight

Framingham

13

Beaver Street

Weight

Framingham

14

Central Street

Weight

Framingham

15

126

School Street

Weight

Natick

16

Marion Street

Weight

Natick

17

Boden Lane

Weight

Wayland

18

 

Oak Street

Weight

 

Map 5 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Wellesley

1

Cliff Road

Clearance

Wellesley

2

Weston Road

Clearance

Weston

3

Merriam Street

Weight

Weston

4

Park Road

Clearance

Needham

5

Warren Street

Clearance

Needham

6

Webster Street

Clearance

Needham

7

Central Avenue

Weight

Waltham

8

Newton Street

Weight

Waltham

9

US 20

Main Street

Weight

Waltham

10

Farwell Street

Weight

Newton

11

Quinobequin Road

Clearance

Newton

12

Chestnut Street

Clearance

Newton

13

Elliot Street

Clearance

Newton

14

Glen Avenue

Clearance

Newton

15

Hammond Pond Parkway

Clearance

Belmont

16

 

Concord Avenue

Clearance

Dots on the map without numbers are identified on an adjacent map.

 

Map 6 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Somerville

1

Dana Street

Clearance

Somerville

2

Webster Avenue

Weight

Cambridge

3

2A

Massachusetts Avenue

Weight

Boston

4

Meridian Street

Weight

Boston

5

West Second Street

Weight

Boston

6

Forest Hills Drive

Weight

Boston

7

Dorchester Avenue

Clearance

Boston

8

Freeport Street

Clearance

Boston

9

Conley Street

Clearance

Boston

10

Temple Street

Clearance

Boston

11

LaGrange Street

Clearance

Boston

12

Granite Avenue

Weight

Boston

13

Hallet Street

Clearance

Boston

14

Hyde Park Avenue

Clearance

Boston

15

 

Neponset Valley Parkway

Weight

 

Map 7 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Milford

1

Fiske Mill Road

Weight

Holliston

2

Arch Street

Clearance

Holliston

3

Exchange Street

Clearance

Franklin

4

Acorn Place

Clearance

Medfield

5

 

Frairy Street

Clearance

 

Map 8 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Feature Crossed

Walpole

1

West Street

Clearance

Franklin Line mile 19.89

Walpole

2

West Street

Clearance

Franklin Line mile 19.51

Walpole

3

West Street

Clearance

Foxborough branch

Walpole

4

School Street

Weight

Memorial Pond outlet

Walpole

5

Plimpton Street

Clearance

Franklin Line

Walpole

6

Coney Street

Weight

Interstate  95

Norwood

7

Morse Street

Clearance

inactive freight line

Norwood

8

Lenox Street

Clearance

inactive freight line

Norwood

9

Guild Street

Clearance

Franklin Line

Westwood

10

East Street

Clearance

Franklin Line

Sharon

11

Canton Street

Clearance

Providence Line

Canton

12

 

Bolivar Street

Clearance

Stoughton Line

Dots on the map without numbers are identified on an adjacent map.

 

 

 

Map 9 Location Index

Municipality

Map Label

Size-restricted Roadways Route

Size-restricted Roadways Street Name

Type of Restriction

Feature Crossed

Weymouth

1

Front Street

Weight

Route 3

Hingham

2

3A

Lincoln Street

Weight

Back River

Cohasset

3

Atlantic Avenue

Weight

Little Harbor inlet

Marshfield

4

3A

Main Street

Weight

South River


 

5          conclusions

The various parts of the MPO’s regional roadway network were built at different times and to different standards. Even with adequate ongoing maintenance, not all bridges allow use by trucks at the Massachusetts maximum permitted vehicle weights or the maximum permitted vehicle heights. The motor freight industry is very adaptable, and alternate routes are identified as necessary to allow truckers to serve their customers.

The need to use alternate routes to bypass weight and height restrictions adds costs to truck movements, which by necessity are passed on to the freight customer. A goal of this study was to identify specific locations in the roadway network that might force trucks to use more circuitous routes. These locations are summarized in Tables 1 and 2 for weight restrictions and Tables 3, 4, and 5 for limited vertical clearance.

A second goal of this study was to consider the severity of these restrictions and get a sense of how motor carriers are affected and how they adapt. In terms of weight restrictions, it appears that most trucks can use almost the entire roadway system unimpeded. The industry most dependent on moving very heavy loads, hence most impacted by weight restrictions, is the construction industry. Specific weight limitations may impact heavy vehicles for the duration of a project, after which work shifts to a different construction site with different access routes.

The significance of limited vertical clearance is quite different. Even a lightly loaded 13-foot 6-inch dry van will be precluded from using a route if it can’t fit under the bridge. The clearance barriers in the system are well marked and widely known. The vast majority of truck drivers find an appropriate route, and the ones who hit a bridge create a record of where improved clearances might possibly help the motor freight industry. Unfortunately, many bridges with limited clearance are located under railroad overpasses whose alignment is generally fixed; and often, the problems related to lowering the road under a railroad-carrying bridge are insurmountable.

Taken altogether, we hope that the data gathered and insights gleaned from this study will inform development and evaluation of the MPO’s TIP and LRTP. Aspects of this work may also be incorporated into the truck component of the MPO’s travel demand models.