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Road and Highway Reference Sites

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empirestate:

--- Quote from: hbelkins on January 27, 2019, 03:21:05 PM ---Or asterisk or footnote the site with the notation that the site is gone, but portions are available on the Wayback Machine or some of the other sites that have scarfed up content.

--- End quote ---

Doesn't one normally scarf things down, not up?

djsekani:
Where do you guys go to get updated (like within the last year or two) traffic counts for certain stretches of road?

hbelkins:

--- Quote from: djsekani on March 12, 2019, 10:12:54 PM ---Where do you guys go to get updated (like within the last year or two) traffic counts for certain stretches of road?

--- End quote ---

Some state DOTs have that information on their sites. Kentucky does; it has a traffic counts map that shows the most recent count and the location of the counting station.

roadfro:

--- Quote from: djsekani on March 12, 2019, 10:12:54 PM ---Where do you guys go to get updated (like within the last year or two) traffic counts for certain stretches of road?

--- End quote ---

I think most state DOTs collect and publish this data in some form.

Nevada DOT compiles this data statewide, even for several local arterials they do not maintain. They publish an annual traffic report on their website that details locations for all permanent (automated traffic recorders, loops embedded into the pavement or roadside sensors) and temporary ("set out count tubes for a week") count locations, and publish the count data/averages for each station going back 10 years.

cahwyguy:
Just a note that I've gone through all of this, and those sites that are still good I've confirmed and will have updated in my links pages when I do my next upload. Watch the Pacific Southwest Forum, or my blog at blog.cahighways.org for the announcement of that in a few weeks.

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