Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1131968 Transportation Research Part B: Methodological 2013 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Formulate the aggregated dynamics of urban multimodal networks with macroscopic fundamental diagrams.•Develop an optimization framework for distributing urban road space between different modes.•Integrate the dynamics of passenger flows at the macroscopic level with a mode choice model.•Investigate static and dynamic urban space distributions and congestion pricing strategies.

Transport systems in real cities are complex with many modes of transport sharing and competing for limited road space. This work intends to understand how space distributions for modes and interactions among modes affect network traffic performance. While the connection between performance of transport systems and general land allocation is the subject of extensive research, space allocation for interacting modes of transport is an open research question. Quantifying the impact of road space distribution on the performance of a congested multimodal transport system with a dynamic aggregated model remains a challenge. In this paper, a multimodal macroscopic fundamental diagram (MFD) is developed to represent the traffic dynamics of a multimodal transport system. Optimization is performed with the objective of minimizing the total passenger hours traveled (PHT) to serve the total demand by redistributing road space among modes. Pricing strategies are also investigated to provide a higher demand shift to more efficient modes. We find by an application to a bi-modal two-region city that (i) the proposed model captures the operational characteristics of each mode, and (ii) optimal dynamic space distribution strategies can be developed. In practice, the approach can serve as a physical dynamic model to inform space distribution strategies for policy makers with different goals of mobility.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Decision Sciences Management Science and Operations Research
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