spacer spacer   spacer   spacer   spacer   spacer  
TPB spacer  
HOME
spacer  
CONTACT
spacer
spacer  
SEARCH!
spacer
spacer
spacer   NCDOT icon  NCDOT
  NC Smartlink icon  NCSMARTLINK
  NCgov.com icon  NCGOV
spacer
spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
TRANSPORTATION PLANNING   |    MPO/RPO   |    TECHNICAL SERVICES   |    TRAFFIC SURVEY  
spacer
open spacer spacer
spacer Hot Links spacer
spacer
spacer spacer spacer
About Us
spacer
TPB Job Opportunities
spacer
Strategic Highway
Corridors

spacer
Traffic Survey Maps
spacer
Functional Classification Maps
spacer
Preconstruction
spacer
Links
spacer
Statewide Transportation Plan
spacer
spacer
Integration Project

 
spacer spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
  HOME > ABOUT US
spacer
spacer spacer
  
About Us
 
TPB TPB Presentation TPB Gathering
 
TPB 1950's spacer North Carolina has been involved in urban transportation planning since 1959. In the mid- 1950's several municipalities took the initiative and developed transportation plans using consultants or their own staffs. North Carolina recognized that governmental agencies should work together to provide plans for the development of the Transportation System and in 1959 enacted North Carolina General Statutes requiring State-municipal cooperative development of a major street plan adequate to serve existing and future travel.
 
In 1962 the U.S. Congress updated the Federal-aid Highway Law to require a "cooperative, comprehensive, and continuing" (3C) planning process in all urban areas over 50,000 in population. This law triggered additional comprehensive modeling studies. The original areas over 50,000 (Metropolitan Planning Organizations or MPOs) were: Asheville, Charlotte, Durham, Fayetteville, Greensboro, High Point Raleigh, and Winston-Salem.
 
Although the state Department of Transportation was working on planning in late 1950s and early 1960s, it was in 1963 when the seeds of the Branch itself were first sown. In 1963 Marion R. (Ron) Poole, PE, PhD headed up the Thoroughfare Planning Unit of the Advanced Planning Department. This small Unit was staffed by Bill Riggs, Tom Hill, and Felton Lowman. The first two Thoroughfare Plans done by the Unit were Roanoke - Rapids and Canton. Originally there were no computer models to process the gravity model calculations or trip assignments, so they were manually calculated and assigned.
 
TPB 1960's spacer In the late 1960s, the Advanced Planning Branch combined with the Planning Branch to become the Planning and Research Branch. The Branch started to use the mainframe computer application PLANPAK/ BAC PAK from the US DOT for transportation modeling. In the mid 1970s there was a staff expansion in the Thoroughfare Planning Unit, and the Unit was moved to the old Sir Walter Raleigh Hotel. As the offices were from converted hotel rooms, each office came with their own bathroom. It was unquestionably the most spacious office accommodations ever seen by the Branch.
 
Peden Steel Building spacer The Thoroughfare Planning Unit moved to Murphy School, and then in the 1980s moved again to the Peden Steel Building off Capital Boulevard. The Thoroughfare Planning Unit continued to assist any Municipality requesting a Thoroughfare Plan. With the 1980 Census, the number of MPOs in the State increased to 15 and most of the modeling for these MPOs continued to be preformed by the Unit's engineers and planners.
 
TPB 1980's spacer In 1984 Ron Poole became the Assistant Manager of the Planning and Research Branch. After a re-organization under Branch Manager Charlie Atkins the Branch was re-named the Planning and Environmental Branch and the Thoroughfare Planning Unit became the Statewide Planning (SWP) Group.
 
The SWP Group placed a high level of emphasis on continuing education, encouraging staff to obtain their Masters' and Doctorate degrees. Personal Computer applications for Transportation Modeling became available, and TranPlan became the modeling platform for the Branch. The Group continued to grow, both in responsibilities and numbers, and in the early 1990s relocated back to the Transportation Building in downtown Raleigh on Wilmington Street.
 
Dr. Ron Poole spacer In 1991 the Statewide Planning Branch was born. It consisted of the previous Statewide Planning Group and additionally the Traffic Survey Unit; Traffic Forecasting; Research; and GIS. The first Manager of the Branch was Ron Poole. Dr. Poole served at the Manager from 1991 until 1999.
 
During this time, the number of Metropolitan Planning Organizations expanded to 17 with the addition of Greenville and Rocky Mount.  Air Quality analysis became a critical component of the planning process, and environmental considerations became increasingly important in considerations for plan development.
 
Blake Norwood, PE spacer A. Blake Norwood, PE, became the second Manager of the Statewide Planning Branch. He served as Manager during a transition time from 1999 to 2003. Reorganization along east / west geographic lines took place in the Planning Units. The Branch assisted in the development of, and provided support for Rural Planning Organizations, a rural counterpart to the Metropolitan Planning Organizations. The Branch continued to place a strong emphasis on continuing technical education and on the Certified Public Manager program for its supervisors and managers.
 
spacer

Mike Bruff, PE currently serves as the Manager for the Branch. In 2004 the Branch name changed to the Transportation Planning Branch (TPB) to more accurately reflect the mission of the Branch: providing multi-modal transportation planning services to municipalities, counties, regions, MPOs and RPOs. The Branch includes two Transportation Planning Units (provide multi-modal Comprehensive Transportation Planning and travel demand modeling and development assistance to local governments, Metropolitan Planning Organizations, and Rural Planning Organizations; traffic forecasts for TIP  projects; air quality conformity analysis to comply with the Clean Air Act and EPA requirements); and a Technical Services Unit (Model Development and Research Group, Traffic Survey Group and a Systems Planning Group). The Traffic Survey Group collects and processes traffic monitoring data and is responsible for maintaining traffic count information and traffic volume maps. The Systems Planning Group is responsible for the CMAQ program, Strategic Highway Corridor and the Statewide Transportation Plan.   

 
As State and Federal requirements have changed to place an increased emphasis on long range planning, the Branch has worked with the MPOs and  RPOs to develop planning partnerships to meet the State's planning needs and serve our primary customer, the citizens of North Carolina.
 
An organizational chart of the Transportation Planning Branch can be found by clicking below.

 
 
spacer
Did You Know


In February 2004, the Statewide Planning Branch changed its name to the Transportation Planning Branch.
spacer
spacer
 
NCDOT Logo   The North Carolina
Department of Transportation
 
 
 
spacer