Highway Infrastructure Program

The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) report card for America's infrastructure states that while road use is expected to increase by more than sixty percent in the next twenty years, nearly sixty percent of the nation's roads are in only poor to fair and substandard road conditions are a major factor in 30 percent of fatal accidents. The highway infrastructure system in the US plays an important role in the commerce, economic development and security of the nation. These systems are deteriorating rapidly because of age, heavy use, overloading and deferred maintenance. While the highway infrastructure system needs to be enhanced and maintained in order to provide the mobility needs of the nation, improvements must also be safe, efficient and environmentally benign. The US spends over 100 billion dollars a year on maintaining, rehabilitating and constructing highway infrastructure. Imaginative, technically skilled, qualified engineers are needed to undertake the task of maintaining, upgrading and building the highway infrastructure system of the new century.

Program Description

The Highway Infrastructure Program (HIP) is a multi-disciplinary interdepartmental program designed to enhance knowledge in highway and transportation related fields including highway engineering and planning, pavement analysis and design, pavement management and rehabilitation, structural engineering, highway and roadside safety, construction materials technology, project management, information technology, environmental issues. WPI offers degrees at the Masters and Ph. D. levels. Each program is individually tailored and approved courses can be chosen from a wide selection of courses offered within WPI.

Contact Person

Highway Infrastructure Program Classes

Highway Design

Highway Safety

Highway Materials

Highway Administration and Management

Highway Infrastructure Program Research

HIP students at WPI can have a wide variety of choices for practical research and project work - they can conduct indepth basic research, perform laboratory based research, or work in collaboration with industrial and governmental partners. Students interested in ultimately pursuing a Ph.D. and a career in academia should choose research requiring a thesis whereas students interested in a career outside academia may choose industrial project work. Students have a great deal of flexibility in defining their own education and training programs.

Current and past research conducted in the HIP is being funded by:

Various State Departments of Transportation Current projects include:

Professors at WPI actively practice a lifelong pursuit of knowledge. Below is a listing of the research interests of the environmental engineering professors. Click on their name to see their research home page. If you would like any additional information or are interested in developing a project, send them an e-mail!

Tahar El-Korchi - Carbon and oxynitride glass fiber reinforced cement composites; development of high strength composites; development of novel tensile testing techniques; reliability of fiber reinforced cement composites; freezing and thawing durability of concrete; detection of pavement surface distress using image technology; the use of imaging technology for mechanical testing of materials; fracture mechanics testing of asphalt concrete. tek@wpi.edu  +1-508-831-5518

Malcolm Ray - Roadside and highway safety, design and analysis of impact resistant structures and crashworthiness of transportation vehicles. Impact mechanics, nonlinear dynamic finite element analysis, nonlinear dynamics, full-scale crash testing and structural design. Risk and cost effectiveness analysis of roadside and highway safety alternatives. mhray@wpi.edu +1-508-831-5340

Rajib Mallick - Pavement design and construction, specifically, design and construction of hot mix asphalt, Superpave, Stone Matrix Asphalt, and pavement recycling. rajib@wpi.edu  +1-508-831-5289 

Learn more about:

Highway Infrastructure Program Facilities

The Civil and Environmental Engineering Department has extensive facilities for research in highway safety, highway materials and crashworthiness. The laboratories include a materials and structures laboratory, an asphalt technology laboratory with new Superpave equipment, a structural mechanics impact laboratory and computer laboratories with state of-the-art computer and network facilities.

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Last modified: May 25, 2007 11:14:07