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Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design – Complete Guide 2026
🚛 Civil & Road Design – Guide 2026

Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design – Complete Guide

Swept path analysis, pavement thickness, kerb radii, gradients, and compliance for truck access

A comprehensive 2026 guide to heavy vehicle driveway design — covering design vehicle selection, swept path analysis, entry and exit gradients, pavement thickness, kerb radii, sight distance, loading dock geometry, and relevant Australian Standards and Austroads references for engineers, traffic consultants, and planners.

Swept Path Design
Pavement Thickness
Gradient Limits
2026 Updated

🚛 Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design Explained

A poorly designed heavy vehicle driveway creates operational problems, safety hazards, structural pavement failures, and costly remediation. Getting the geometry and construction right from the start is essential in 2026.

✔ What Is Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design?

Heavy vehicle driveway design encompasses the geometric, structural, and operational planning required to provide safe and efficient access for trucks, semi-trailers, articulated vehicles, buses, and other heavy vehicles to and from a site. It covers entry and exit geometry, swept path clearances, driveway gradients, kerb radii, pavement thickness, sight distances, and loading dock layout. Poor design leads to vehicles overriding kerbs, mounting footpaths, damaging property, blocking public roads during manoeuvres, and causing premature pavement failure under repeated heavy axle loads.

✔ When Is a Heavy Vehicle Driveway Assessment Required?

A formal heavy vehicle driveway design or swept path assessment is required for most development applications (DAs) involving industrial, commercial, logistics, retail, or mixed-use sites that generate significant heavy vehicle movements. In Australia, this is typically triggered by local government development control plans (DCPs), state road authority access policies, and traffic impact assessment (TIA) guidelines. Any site expecting regular access by vehicles over 4.5 tonnes GVM should be assessed against heavy vehicle driveway design standards, including those from Austroads and state road authorities.

✔ Key Design Principles

Effective heavy vehicle driveway design rests on four principles: appropriate design vehicle selection (match the vehicle template to the largest vehicle that will regularly use the site); geometric adequacy (ensure swept path clearances, gradients, and radii accommodate that vehicle); structural sufficiency (design the pavement to carry the expected axle loads over its design life); and safe integration with the public road, footpath, and pedestrian network. See our guide on backfilling around concrete foundations for related pavement subgrade preparation guidance.

Design Vehicle Selection for Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design

The starting point for any heavy vehicle driveway design is selecting the correct design vehicle — the largest and most demanding vehicle expected to regularly use the driveway. Austroads and the National Heavy Vehicle Regulator (NHVR) define standard vehicle dimensions and turning templates used across Australia. Over-designing for a vehicle that never visits wastes money; under-designing for the actual operating vehicle creates dangerous and unworkable access.

Design vehicle templates are used in swept path analysis software such as AutoTURN, SIDRA, Transoft Solutions, and TURN to verify that a vehicle can navigate the driveway entry, internal circulation, and exit without encroaching on footpaths, median islands, opposing traffic, or adjacent structures. The design vehicle must be able to complete all required manoeuvres from the worst-case starting position on the public road, using no more than the legal lane width available.

🚛 Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design – Standard Design Vehicles (Austroads)

🚗 B85 Car
5.1 m length
1.87 m width
🚐 Rigid Truck
Up to 12.5 m
2.5 m width
🚚 Semi-Trailer
Up to 19.0 m
2.5 m width
🚛 B-Double
Up to 25.0 m
2.5 m width
🏗️ Road Train
Up to 53.5 m
2.5 m width

Design vehicle selection must reflect the largest vehicle that will regularly use the site. Dimensions are overall vehicle envelopes per Austroads Guide to Road Design Part 3 and NHVR PBS standards 2026. Always verify current vehicle dimensions against the applicable state heavy vehicle network permit conditions.

📌 Design Vehicle vs Permitted Vehicle — Critical Distinction

The design vehicle used in swept path analysis is not always the same as the largest vehicle permitted on the adjacent public road. A site may be designed for a semi-trailer (19 m) even if B-doubles (25 m) are legally permitted on the road, because the site operator only expects semi-trailers. Conversely, if a logistics centre expects B-double deliveries, the driveway must be designed to accommodate them regardless of whether B-doubles are the dominant vehicle on the road. Always confirm the expected vehicle mix with the site operator and the relevant road authority before finalising the design vehicle selection.

Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design: Entry and Exit Geometry

The geometric design of a heavy vehicle driveway entry and exit determines whether vehicles can safely enter and exit the site without conflicting with pedestrians, cyclists, or other road users. The key geometric parameters are driveway width, kerb return radii, throat length, sight distance, and the angle of intersection with the public road. Each of these must be designed to suit the selected design vehicle and the traffic volume and speed on the adjacent road.

📏 Driveway Width

Heavy vehicle driveways typically require a minimum throat width of 6.0–9.0 m for two-way operation (one lane each direction), or 3.5–5.5 m for one-way operation. For articulated vehicles and B-doubles, wider throats of 7.0–10.0 m may be required depending on the angle of entry and the available manoeuvre space inside the site. Width must accommodate the vehicle body plus clearance to kerb and any gatehouse or bollard structures.

🔄 Kerb Return Radii

The kerb return radius at the driveway entry controls how tightly a vehicle can turn from the road into the site. Heavy vehicle driveways typically require kerb radii of 10–15 m for rigid trucks and 15–20 m for semi-trailers. B-doubles and road trains may require radii of 20–30 m or compound curves. Swept path analysis must confirm that the design vehicle's rear wheels track inside the kerb return without mounting the kerb or footpath.

📐 Sight Distance

Adequate sight distance must be provided in both directions along the public road from the driveway entry to allow a departing heavy vehicle driver to safely identify and merge with approaching traffic. Austroads sight distance requirements depend on the posted speed of the adjacent road — at 60 km/h, a minimum approaching sight distance of approximately 70–90 m is required. Sight triangles must be kept clear of vegetation, parked vehicles, signage, and structures both during design and in perpetuity during site operation.

📍 Throat Length

The throat length is the distance from the property boundary (or edge of the public road) to the first internal intersection or parking area. For sites with high heavy vehicle volumes, a minimum throat length equal to the length of the design vehicle is recommended — typically 19 m for semi-trailers and 25 m for B-doubles. This prevents queuing vehicles from blocking the public road while waiting for internal clearance, which is a common cause of traffic and safety incidents at busy logistics sites.

📏 Driveway Gradient

Maximum driveway gradient for heavy vehicle access is typically 1:10 (10%) for short grades up to 30 m and 1:12.5 (8%) for longer grades. Loaded semi-trailers and B-doubles should not be expected to climb grades steeper than 8% on driveways. Critical change-of-grade points (sumps and crests) must be rounded with vertical curves to prevent high-centred vehicles — the minimum vertical curve length depends on the wheelbase of the design vehicle and should be verified by swept path analysis in the vertical plane.

🔃 One-Way vs Two-Way Circulation

Where site area permits, one-way circulation (separate entry and exit driveways) is strongly preferred for heavy vehicle sites as it eliminates head-on conflicts, reduces required driveway widths, and simplifies swept path geometry. Two-way operation requires vehicles to pass in the throat, requiring wider driveways and careful attention to forward and rearward visibility. One-way circulation also improves pedestrian safety by reducing the unpredictability of large vehicle movements near building entries and car parks.

Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design: Gradient Reference Table

Driveway gradient is one of the most critical parameters in heavy vehicle driveway design. Excessive gradients prevent loaded trucks from safely entering or exiting a site, cause grounding of long wheelbase vehicles at change-of-grade points, and create braking and runaway risks on exit. The following table summarises maximum and recommended gradients for different heavy vehicle driveway contexts.

Driveway Context Maximum Grade Recommended Grade Vertical Curve Required Notes
General heavy vehicle driveway (short grade <30 m) 10% (1:10) ≤8% (1:12.5) At all grade changes ✅ Standard
General heavy vehicle driveway (long grade >30 m) 8% (1:12.5) ≤6% (1:16.7) At all grade changes ✅ Standard
B-double / road train access 6% (1:16.7) ≤4% (1:25) Mandatory — long wheelbase ⚠️ Check operator requirements
Loading dock ramp (below grade) 15% (1:6.7) short ramp ≤12% (1:8.3) Mandatory at top and bottom ⚠️ Sump vertical curve critical
Driveway within 6 m of road edge 5% (1:20) ≤3% (1:33) At grade change from road ✅ Minimises road/site conflict
Fuel tanker / hazmat vehicle access 5% (1:20) ≤3% (1:33) Required ❌ Steeper grades prohibited
Driveway at footpath crossing (pedestrian zone) See footpath crossfall rules Maintain ≤2% crossfall in footpath zone N/A ⚠️ AS 1428.1 applies to footpath

General HV Driveway (Short Grade)

Maximum Grade10% (1:10)
Recommended≤8% (1:12.5)
Vertical CurveAt all grade changes
Status✅ Standard

B-Double / Road Train Access

Maximum Grade6% (1:16.7)
Recommended≤4% (1:25)
Vertical CurveMandatory — long wheelbase
Status⚠️ Check operator requirements

Loading Dock Ramp (Below Grade)

Maximum Grade15% (1:6.7) short ramp
Recommended≤12% (1:8.3)
Vertical CurveMandatory at top & bottom
Status⚠️ Sump curve critical

Fuel Tanker / Hazmat Access

Maximum Grade5% (1:20)
Recommended≤3% (1:33)
Vertical CurveRequired
Status❌ Steeper grades prohibited

Driveway at Footpath Crossing

Footpath Crossfall≤2% (AS 1428.1)
StandardAS 1428.1 applies
Status⚠️ High risk area

⚠️ Vertical Curve at Change of Grade — Critical Design Requirement

One of the most frequently overlooked aspects of heavy vehicle driveway design is the need for vertical curves at all significant changes of grade. A rigid truck or semi-trailer with a long wheelbase and low ground clearance can become high-centred (grounded) at an abrupt change from a steep positive grade to a flat area, or at the base of a loading dock ramp. The minimum vertical curve length (K value) at each change of grade must be calculated based on the design vehicle's wheelbase and ground clearance. AutoTURN and similar software can simulate this in three dimensions. Failure to provide adequate vertical curves is a common cause of driveway rejection by road authorities and councils at the development assessment stage.

Pavement Thickness Design for Heavy Vehicle Driveways

The structural pavement design for a heavy vehicle driveway must account for the axle loads, frequency of heavy vehicle movements, subgrade strength, and design life of the pavement. Heavy vehicle driveways are subjected to far greater structural demands than standard car park or residential driveway pavements, and standard driveway specifications are entirely inadequate for semi-trailer or B-double loading.

⚙️ Key Pavement Design Inputs for Heavy Vehicle Driveways

Design Traffic = Number of HV axle passes over design life (typically 20–30 years)
Subgrade CBR = California Bearing Ratio of in-situ or engineered subgrade (%)
Pavement Type = Rigid (concrete) or Flexible (asphalt / granular base + seal)

Austroads Pavement Design Guide (AGPT02) provides the primary design methodology for Australian heavy vehicle driveway and road pavement thickness design. For concrete rigid pavements, AS 3600 and the Concrete Institute of Australia (CIA) industrial pavement guides are also relevant.

Indicative Pavement Thickness for Heavy Vehicle Driveways

The following indicative pavement thicknesses are based on Austroads flexible and rigid pavement design principles for typical heavy vehicle driveway applications. These are indicative values only — a full pavement design should be undertaken for all commercial and industrial driveway projects, based on actual subgrade testing (CBR) and confirmed traffic data.

Design Vehicle / Application Subgrade CBR Concrete Slab Thickness Asphalt + Base Thickness Sub-base Required
Light rigid truck (<12.5 m, low frequency) 5–10% 150–175 mm 50 mm AC + 200 mm base 150 mm compacted
Heavy rigid truck (up to 12.5 m, medium freq.) 5–10% 175–200 mm 60 mm AC + 250 mm base 150–200 mm compacted
Semi-trailer (19 m, regular daily movements) 5–10% 200–250 mm 75 mm AC + 300 mm base 200–250 mm compacted
B-double (25 m, regular daily movements) 5–10% 250–300 mm 90 mm AC + 350 mm base 250–300 mm compacted
Semi-trailer on poor subgrade <3% 275–325 mm 90 mm AC + 400 mm base 300 mm+ with geotextile
Loading dock apron (slow speed, high freq.) 5–10% 250–300 mm (preferred) Not recommended 200–250 mm compacted

Semi-Trailer (19 m, Regular Daily)

Subgrade CBR5–10%
Concrete Slab200–250 mm
Asphalt + Base75 mm AC + 300 mm base
Sub-base200–250 mm compacted

B-Double (25 m, Regular Daily)

Subgrade CBR5–10%
Concrete Slab250–300 mm
Asphalt + Base90 mm AC + 350 mm base
Sub-base250–300 mm compacted

Semi-Trailer on Poor Subgrade

Subgrade CBR<3%
Concrete Slab275–325 mm
Asphalt + Base90 mm AC + 400 mm base
Sub-base300 mm+ with geotextile

Loading Dock Apron

Subgrade CBR5–10%
Concrete Slab250–300 mm (preferred)
AsphaltNot recommended
Sub-base200–250 mm compacted

Light Rigid Truck (Low Frequency)

Subgrade CBR5–10%
Concrete Slab150–175 mm
Asphalt + Base50 mm AC + 200 mm base
Sub-base150 mm compacted

✅ Why Concrete Is Preferred for Heavy Vehicle Driveway Pavements

Rigid concrete pavement is strongly preferred over flexible asphalt at loading dock aprons, slow-speed turning areas, and high-frequency heavy vehicle paths for three reasons: resistance to rutting and shoving under slow-speed, high-torque heavy vehicle movements; resistance to fuel and hydraulic oil contamination that softens asphalt; and lower long-term maintenance cost over a 30–40 year design life. Concrete pavement at loading docks should be reinforced (typically mesh or air-entrained concrete in freeze-thaw climates) and jointed to control cracking under thermal and load cycling.

Step-by-Step Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design Process

The following process reflects current best practice for heavy vehicle driveway design in Australia in 2026, covering the full scope from initial briefing through to construction documentation and council submission.

  • Step 1 – Establish the design vehicle: Confirm the largest and most frequent heavy vehicle type expected at the site with the operator. Obtain accurate vehicle dimensions and wheelbase data. Select the corresponding Austroads or AutoTURN design vehicle template.
  • Step 2 – Review the road authority requirements: Check the applicable state road authority standard (TfNSW, Main Roads WA, VicRoads, DTMR Qld, etc.) and local council DCP for driveway crossover location, geometry, number of access points, and any existing access restrictions on the road.
  • Step 3 – Develop concept driveway geometry: Set out driveway width, kerb radii, throat length, and internal circulation on a scaled plan. Ensure adequate footpath treatment through the driveway crossover zone, maintaining ≤2% footpath crossfall per AS 1428.1.
  • Step 4 – Perform swept path analysis: Use AutoTURN or equivalent software to verify that the design vehicle can enter and exit the site from the worst-case position on the road, within the available road width, without encroaching on footpaths, medians, or opposing traffic. Check all internal manoeuvres including turning to and from loading dock positions.
  • Step 5 – Check sight distances: Calculate required sight distance at the driveway based on the posted speed of the adjacent road and verify that the sight triangle is clear of obstructions from the design eye height of a truck driver (approximately 2.0–2.4 m above road level).
  • Step 6 – Design the vertical alignment: Establish driveway levels from the road surface, check maximum and change-of-grade requirements, and design vertical curves at all significant grade changes. Check for vehicle grounding using the design vehicle's undercarriage geometry.
  • Step 7 – Design the pavement structure: Obtain subgrade CBR from geotechnical investigation. Design pavement thickness per Austroads AGPT02 for the expected heavy vehicle traffic over the design life. Specify concrete or asphalt as appropriate for the application.
  • Step 8 – Prepare documentation: Produce driveway design drawings, swept path diagrams, pavement specification, and any required traffic engineering assessment report for inclusion in the development application (DA) or construction certificate (CC) submission.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions – Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design

What is the minimum driveway width for a semi-trailer in Australia?
The minimum driveway throat width for a semi-trailer (19 m) in Australia depends on the entry angle and available manoeuvre space inside the site. As a general guide, a two-way heavy vehicle driveway serving semi-trailers requires a minimum throat width of 7.0–8.0 m. One-way entry or exit for semi-trailers can be as narrow as 4.5–5.5 m if the internal swept path geometry is adequate. These widths must always be confirmed by a swept path analysis using the specific design vehicle. Wider driveways (up to 10 m) may be required at high-volume sites or where the entry angle from the road is acute. Check the applicable local council or state road authority standard for minimum specified widths.
What gradient is too steep for a heavy vehicle driveway?
For standard heavy vehicles (rigid trucks and semi-trailers), a driveway gradient exceeding 10% (1:10) on a short grade is generally considered too steep and should be avoided. For longer grades, anything above 8% (1:12.5) is problematic for loaded semi-trailers. B-doubles and road trains should not be expected to navigate gradients exceeding 6% (1:16.7). Fuel tankers and hazmat vehicles are typically restricted to a maximum of 5% (1:20). Equally important are the change-of-grade points — even a moderate 6% grade can cause vehicle grounding if the transition to a flat area is abrupt, so vertical curves must be provided at all significant grade changes regardless of the absolute gradient value.
What software is used for heavy vehicle swept path analysis?
The most widely used swept path analysis software in Australia in 2026 is AutoTURN (by Transoft Solutions), which integrates with AutoCAD and provides a comprehensive library of Austroads and international design vehicle templates. Other tools include TURN (an older but still-used Australian tool developed from Austroads research), SIDRA Intersection for intersection-level analysis, and Autodesk Vehicle Tracking for CAD-integrated projects. Most councils and state road authorities accept swept path diagrams produced in AutoTURN or equivalent, but always check submission requirements. Swept path diagrams must clearly show the design vehicle outline, swept path envelope, road markings, kerb lines, and any clearance to adjacent features.
How thick should a concrete driveway be for heavy trucks?
For a driveway regularly used by heavy rigid trucks (up to 12.5 m), a minimum concrete slab thickness of 175–200 mm on a well-compacted sub-base is generally appropriate for a medium-strength subgrade (CBR 5–10%). For semi-trailers with regular daily movements, increase this to 200–250 mm. Loading dock aprons and slow-speed turning areas where vehicles apply high torque and repeated loading should be designed with a minimum of 250–300 mm concrete. All thickness values should be confirmed by a formal pavement design per Austroads AGPT02 based on actual site CBR testing. Reinforce the concrete with mesh (SL82 or SL92 minimum for heavy vehicle areas) and space contraction joints at 4–5 m centres to control cracking.
Do I need council approval for a heavy vehicle driveway?
Yes, in virtually all cases. A new or modified heavy vehicle driveway crossover requires approval from the local council and, where the driveway connects to a state or regional road, approval from the relevant state road authority (TfNSW, Main Roads WA, VicRoads, etc.). Most development applications (DAs) for industrial, commercial, or logistics developments must include a traffic engineering report demonstrating that the proposed driveway meets the applicable design standards. The road authority may impose conditions including driveway width, number of access points, sight distance provisions, and the requirement for a turning area within the site so that heavy vehicles can enter and exit in a forward direction without reversing onto the public road.
What is the kerb radius required for a semi-trailer driveway?
The kerb return radius required for a semi-trailer driveway entry depends on the angle of turn, the width of the road, and the internal swept path geometry available. As a starting point, a kerb radius of 15 m is commonly used for semi-trailer access where vehicles are turning 90° from a standard urban road. Where road geometry is constrained or the entry angle is acute, radii of 18–20 m may be needed. For B-doubles, minimum kerb radii of 20–25 m are typically required. These values must always be confirmed by swept path analysis — the kerb radius is not a fixed rule but a design variable that interacts with driveway width, road width, and the available turning space inside the site. Compound curves (two radii in sequence) are sometimes used to optimise geometry in constrained sites.

🌐 Further Resources on Heavy Vehicle Driveway Design

Austroads – Guide to Road Design

The Austroads Guide to Road Design (AGRD) — particularly Parts 3, 4A, and 6A — provides the primary Australian engineering reference for driveway design, design vehicles, swept path geometry, sight distance, and pavement design for heavy vehicle access.

Visit Austroads →

NHVR – National Heavy Vehicle Regulator

The NHVR publishes vehicle dimension and mass limits, PBS (Performance Based Standards) vehicle specifications, and network access conditions that define the design vehicle parameters used in heavy vehicle driveway design across Australia in 2026.

Visit NHVR →

ConcreteMetric – Full Guide Library

Browse the complete library of concrete and civil engineering guides on ConcreteMetric — covering pavement design, structural assessment, sustainability, and construction best practice for engineers and planners in 2026.

Browse All Guides →