Roadside Planting and the Care of Trees and Shrubs Along Highways* Tunnels of cool shade refresh the tourist. b—^j|HE fact that many organizations aside from state, county and ■ township highway departments are taking great interest in roadside planting makes it advisable for these departments to adopt certain standards of procedure to govern this work. Property owners, improvement associations, garden clubs, women’s clubs, and other bodies are interested in making our highways more attractive as well as utilitarian and their work should be coordinated. Highway departments should have authority to compel conformity to standards, relating to roadside planting, established by them. Ample precedent for such action by highway authorities is to be found in the states of Washington, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Michigan. Nearly 2 million trees will be required for complete ornamentation of the Washington state highways; Massachusetts has planted nearly 50,000 up to date; Wayne County, Michigan, has specifications governing all roadside work, which telephone and electric service companies must observe; and Kane County, Illinois, is planting the full distance of its famous Fox River Trail. El Paso County, Texas, made a beginning on this work a few years ago. On the "Ideal Section” of the Lincoln Highway roadside planting was an important contract. The Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway Association has adopted the plan of planting pecan trees as mile posts along its highway from Richmond, Va., to Vicksburg, Miss. Pennsylvania and Michigan have appointed landscape gardeners, under whose direction new planting is planned and executed, and exist ing trees are preserved during highway construction. Shade trees of consider- and'oetober TIT'S a,s a “*» °f in Concrete Highly Maga-inc for August, September Association formerlyw?hn A Assistant Manager. Highways Bureau, Portland Cement of the original articles r, 1,,S S'monds & Co., Landscape Gardeners, Chicago. Continuing demand for copies .0 the general sTb'ie" "il" ma""'al' 55 * '°"'"bU,,°n ROADSIDE PLANTING 3 able growth may govern the location of a pavement so long as a serious disalignment is not the result. Locating engineers in Pennsylvania are instructed that “there is no excuse whatever for any trees being unnecessarily destroyed or injured during the progress of the work.” I. Location In locating roadside trees, standard distances should be established from the edges of the pavement and from the property lines for a belt of planting, at the same time giving due regard to safety for present traffic, possible future widening of the pavement, and drainage. The planting location must also take into consideration the location of pole and wire lines, the recommended position for which is at the extreme sides of the right-of-way, preferably not more than 3 feet from the property or fence line. It is recommended that oil a 00-foot right-of-way the trees be set not less than 10 feet from the center line nor more than 22 feet, giving a minimum clearance of 0 feet from the side of a 20-foot pavement to the planting. On a 00-foot right-of-way (the standard highway) they should be not less than 10 feet, nor more than 25 feet, from the center line. Wider highways may be treated similarly, always reserving a belt or right-of-way for roadside planting which will not encroach upon other roadside utilities. Such a belt of roadside planting is far more t o be desired than straight, parallel, rows of trees. A tree-bordered rural avenue. Natural clusters of trees break the monotony of evenly spaced planting.