Major Projects Questionnaire

Project Information

Agency Name TxDOT Houston District
Project Title FM 1314 Widening
Facility/Street/Highway FM 1314
Limits From SH 105 to SH 242
Description Widen from a 2-lane to a 4-lane divided roadway
Timeframe Medium Term (6-10 Years)
Estimated Cost $140,600,000.00

Regional Transportation Plan Goals

According to the 2045 RTP, this project falls under H-GAC’s Manage, Maintain, and Expand strategies, which collectively directly support all five of H-GAC’s goals of improving safety, achieving/maintaining a state of good repair, moving people and goods efficiently, strengthening regional economic competitiveness, and protecting cultural and natural resources. [1] Improve Safety: This project will provide additional capacity to the roadway and reduce primary and secondary crashes caused by congestion. [2] Achieve & Maintain State of Good Repair: In a widening/reconstruction project, old pavement is removed, and new pavement is constructed, thus increasing the state of good repair. [3] Move People and Goods Reliably and Efficiently: This project will reduce congestion and reduce resulting crashes, increasing the reliability of the facility. [4] Strengthen Regional Economic Competitiveness: This project will reduce congestion and resulting crashes, increasing the truck travel time reliability of the facility, boosting regional and economic competitiveness. [5] Conserve and Protect Natural and Cultural Resources: This project will include improved drainage, which will benefit the natural resources abutting the facility. This project will reduce emissions caused by idling and congestion.

Regional Significance

Roadway

Minor Arterial

Potential Crash Reductions

3.516

5.525

Crash rates for this segment are per 100 million VMT. The fatality rate is 3.516, higher than the regional average (1.23), and the serious injury rate is 5.525, lower than the regional average (6.18). The widening of the roadway from an existing two-lane to a four-lane divided roadway will provide additional capacity to the roadway and reduce primary and secondary crashes caused by congestion. The addition of pedestrian infrastructure will allow cyclists and pedestrians to safely use the facility and reduce points of conflict with vehicles, thus improving the overall safety of the segment. The consolidated crash reduction factor for this project is 110%, as a result of installing sidewalks (WC 407) and widening from 2 lane - 4 lane divided (WC 538).

Potential Congestion Reductions

No

1.0 – 1.25

Travel Time Index (TTI) is a ratio that compares peak period travel times along a corridor to average travel times, thus estimating a relative level of rush hour congestion. Current TTI for the project area is 1.11, indicating that it takes 1.11 times as long to travel this corridor in the peak period than average, which is mildly congested.

This project will add capacity. Adding capacity (WC 538) will relieve congestion on the facility by allowing for a reduced vehicle to capacity ratio. Further, it will allow more room for traffic to avoid crashes on the segment, reducing congestion caused by crashes. Shared use paths or sidewalks (WC 407) could be constructed on this project as well. The segment will be brought up to TxDOT and FHWA safety design standards.

Connectivity to Jobs, Medical Facilities, and Activity Centers

Yes

1,178

No

Yes

This added capacity project will be relieving congestion in a high growth area with many subdivisions (Mavera, Evergreen, Stewart's Ranch, Hidden Creek, Ladera Creek, and Venetian Pines to name a few) under construction building thousands of new homes. There is also a Home Depot Distribution Center that employs many people at the north end of this project corridor in Conroe (Industrial Ln intersection connects into an unnamed business park) and a new HEB under development at the south end of the project corridor.

State of Good Repair

38 years

Good

The pavement on this facility is mostly in Good condition, according to TxDOT and FHWA guidelines. In a widening/reconstruction project like this project, pavement is removed and new pavement is constructed, thus increasing the state of good repair and extending the service life of the facility. This segment contains a bridge in Fair condition, according to FHWA guidelines. It was built in 1986. It is rated as being in Fair condition overall, with a superstructure condition score of 6, substructure condition score of 7, and a deck condition score of 6. The project includes reconstruction of the roadway which will lead to an improvement in the state of good repair and extend the service life of the facility.

Biking and Walking Conditions

FM 1314 will have bike lanes and shoulders on project CSJ 0912-37-237. Bike lanes increase the safety of riders and improve regional connectivity. Shared use paths/sidewalks could be installed on this widening project too.

Impacts to Vulnerable Populations

8,773

8,689

2,756

1,529

791

911

37.60

The area surrounding the project segment has a higher low-income population (16.57%) as compared to the regional average of 13.5%. The area surrounding the project segment has a lower minority population (52.26%) as compared to the regional average of 65% minority. Because of its central location in the regional network, the project will produce improvements in mobility and connectivity for vulnerable populations as well as connectivity to schools, medical facilities, and social services for the regional population. As a result of the improvement, vulnerable populations will have increased resilience and evacuation capacity in the event of hazards. FM 1314 runs somewhat parallel to IH 45 N and connects directly to IH 69 N which are evacuation routes. The project will improve drainage to ATLAS-14 standards, which reduce flooding events and their impact on vulnerable populations.

The area surrounding the project segment has a higher low-income population (16.57%) as compared to the regional average of 13.5%. The area surrounding the project segment has a lower minority population (52.26%) as compared to the regional average of 65% minority. TxDOT’s Environmental Process is designed to ensure compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Executive Order on Environmental Justice. Standard practice is to implement projects that provide user safety and operational efficiency while taking into account environmental quality and impacts to surrounding communities. In practice this means identifying and assessing potential project impacts, then proposing measures to avoid, minimize and/or mitigate disproportionately high and adverse effects to Environmental Justice Populations. For example, the project will improve drainage to ATLAS-14 standards, which will mitigate impacts from added capacity to vulnerable populations.

Hurricane Evacuation Route

No

Yes

FM 1314 runs parallel to IH 45 N which is identified as an evacuation route. It also runs parallel and connects directly to IH 69 N which is classified as an evacuation route.

Additional Documents

2023CFP-103 map.png

2023HGAC-CFP-CR-LOS-City of Conroe - Asst Director of Capital Projects (All Montgomery Co Projects).pdf

2023HGAC-CFP-CR-LOS-Montgomery County - County Judge&Comm (All Montgomery Co Projects).pdf