Horizontal Curve Geometry
Circular horizontal curve elements: radius, degree of curvature (arc and chord definitions), tangent T, arc length L, mid-ordinate M, external E. Plus AASHTO horizontal sight-distance lateral clearance check.
Defaults: R = 1000 ft, Δ = 30°. AASHTO horizontal sight-distance clearance: M = R [1 − cos(28.65 SSD/R)]; check against actual roadside obstruction.
Curve labels — PC, PT, PI
PC = Point of Curvature (start of curve). PT = Point of Tangent (end of curve). PI = Point of Intersection (where the two tangent lines would meet if the curve weren't there). Δ = deflection angle = the angle the alignment turns through, measured at PI.
Arc vs chord definition of D
US highway design uses arc definition: D is the angle subtended by 100 ft of curve arc. Railroad design historically used chord definition: D is the angle subtended by a 100-ft chord. They differ for sharp curves but converge for large radii (R > 500 ft). This calculator uses arc definition.
Sight distance on horizontal curves
Drivers can't see around obstructions on the inside of a horizontal curve. Required lateral clearance from the centerline of the inside lane to any obstruction:
Mssd = R [1 − cos(28.65 × SSD / R)] (US: ft, degrees)
Compare against the horizontal offset to actual obstruction (median barrier, building, hillside, sound wall). If actual M < Mssd, you'll need to either remove the obstruction, increase R, or accept reduced design speed.
Note: Mssd is measured to the driver eye position (3.5 ft from inside edge of travelway, on average), not to the inside edge.
Spirals and superelevation transitions
This calculator is for circular curves only. Most highway design includes spirals (clothoid curves) at PC and PT to gradually introduce/exit centripetal acceleration and superelevation. The spiral's Ls length is approximately Ls = 1.6 V³ / R for design speed V (mph) and R (ft). Add this to the geometric design — most CAD survey software handles it automatically.
Reverse and compound curves
Compound curves (two consecutive curves in the same direction with different radii) and reverse curves (consecutive curves in opposite directions) are common in mountain alignments. AASHTO recommends a tangent of at least 200 ft (60 m) between reverse curves to allow superelevation transition.
Reference: AASHTO (2018). A Policy on Geometric Design of Highways and Streets, 7th ed., §3.3. Garber, N.J., Hoel, L.A. (2015). Traffic and Highway Engineering, 5th ed., Cengage, ch. 16. Hickerson, T.F. (1967). Route Surveying and Design, 5th ed., McGraw-Hill.