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  • Standard Operating Procedures for the Site Selection, Design, and Maintenance of All-Season Roads Linear Infrastructure

    Abstract: Planning, designing, constructing, and maintaining all-season roads in cold regions requires navigating complex environmental, hydrologic, and geomorphologic challenges. Harsh conditions, such as permafrost, frost-susceptible soils, muskeg, and extreme cold, are compounded by limited data availability, remote locations, and fragile ecosystems. Recent Arctic strategies across the DoD have identified changing weather patterns as significant threats to infrastructure, operations, and training land management in these regions. Key risks include degrading permafrost, changes in precipitation intensity and duration, and the loss of soil bearing capacity in saturated soils, all of which are examined in detail. As the Department of Defense expands Arctic training capabilities, infrastructure investments across Alaska must balance operational goals with sustainability and resilience. This report synthesizes the military’s typical methods for constructing roads in contingency environments, identifies practices used in the construction of the Alaska-Canada Highway, and draws from consultations with training land managers, a thorough literature review, and active engineering research. The report highlights the importance of holistic design that prioritizes longevity, environmental conservation, and safety by addressing cold-region challenges, mitigation strategies, and best practices. This resource is indispensable for military units and infrastructure planners tasked with navigating the complexities of cold-region infrastructure construction and operation.
  • Standard Operating Procedures for the Design, Construction, and Maintenance of Summer Roads and Trails, Drop Zones, and Firebreaks in Cold Regions

    Abstact: As DoD investments across Alaska increase in response to DoD Arctic strategies, expanded training opportunities are necessary to enable the military to enhance their Arctic capabilities. In addition, wildfire management is increasingly important in the area as the summer season has expanded and warmed in recent decades. This report addresses the siting, design, construction, and maintenance of summer roads and trails, drop zones, and firebreaks on DoD lands in Alaska and other cold regions. It considers the harsh weather conditions, extreme seasonality, and remoteness of these environments, in addition to the general requirements of understanding the local environment, relevant risks, permitting, and regulations. The three types of linear infrastructure are assessed together as each involves the clearing of land and maintaining it as cleared, and therefore share common risks. This report summarizes best practices throughout the project lifecycle and synthesizes risk mitigation strategies informed by a comprehensive literature review and conversations with local training land managers. Using Fort Wainwright in Interior Alaska as an example, it provides Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) to aid land managers and military unit leadership as they navigate challenges and opportunities in their increased use of these critical linear infrastructure types in high latitude environments.
  • Standard Operating Procedures for the Design, Maintenance, and Operation of Arctic and Subarctic Winter Roads

    Abstract: Operations in cold regions require vehicular maneuvering across snowpacks or frozen surfaces. Winter roads and their route determination, construction, and monitoring are widely studied. This report analyzes historical and current literature on winter road construction and operations, reviews risk assessment techniques, examines the impact of uncertain weather on road reliability, and provides a standard operating procedure for design, maintenance, and use. Winter roads, snow roads, ice roads, and ice bridges enable seasonal access in Arctic and Subarctic regions. They allow cross-country maneuverability over terrain like wetlands and bogs, which are impassable in summer. These roads are critical for training, logistics, and construction in areas without all-season access. When combined with ice bridges they can provide near-unlimited travel. Effectiveness depends on proper planning, construction, and monitoring. Snow roads require controlled compaction for strength, while ice roads require sufficient ice thickness to support loads. Both rely on tools like visual inspections, ground-penetrating radar, and unmanned aerial systems to ensure safety. With extreme seasonal variability, adaptive strategies are essential. Shortened seasons and unpredictable freeze–thaw cycles demand modern technologies, predictive weather modeling, and improved reinforcement. This report integrates historical knowledge with engineering advancements to improve winter road durability, reduce risks, and support cold-region operations.
  • Standard Operating Procedures for the Design, Construction, and Maintenance of Linear Infrastructure in Fens in Cold Regions

    Abstract: In Alaska and across the Arctic and Subarctic, winter conditions can enable the expansion of linear infrastructure across the frozen landscape of fen wetlands. This expands military training opportunities into lowland wet, boggy, mostly impassable terrain. However, there are personnel, civilian, and environmental risks from using fens as travel corridors and drop zones. The effective design, construction, operation, and maintenance of such infrastructure on fens supports the dual mandate of troop training to fulfill the mission and protect the environment. This Technical Report (TR) addresses the risks of the establishment and use of linear infrastructure on the DoD lands in Alaska and in other austere cold environments where the DoD operates. This TR is founded on a review of methods used by US Army Installations, focusing primarily on Fort Wainwright in Interior Alaska. It establishes basic standard operating procedures (SOPs) by drawing on federal agency and international best practices and emerging research in circumpolar regions and beyond. This TR serves as a reference document for military land and infrastructure planners and unit leadership to create and maintain linear infrastructure on fens as environmental challenges evolve and opportunities develop to further the Army mission in high latitude environments.