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Public Transportation Planning

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Public Transportation Planning Presented by Dr. Tom V. Mathew Transportation Systems Engineering Department of Civil Engineering IIT Bombay September 2004 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Public Transportation Planning


1
Public Transportation Planning
Presented by Dr. Tom V. Mathew
Transportation Systems Engineering Department of
Civil Engineering IIT Bombay
September 2004
2
Overview
  1. Introduction
  2. Urban passenger transport modes
  3. Vehicle characteristics motion
  4. Bus transit mode
  5. Rail transit mode
  6. Transit system performance
  7. Planning Issues

3
1. Introduction
  • 1.1 Transportation location of cities
  • 1.2 Form structure of cities
  • 1.3 Brief history of public transportation

4
1.1 Transportation location of cities
  • The exchanges of goods affected transportation
    (eg. Mumbai, Chennai, Istanbul.)
  • Intensification goods exchange resulted in
    transloading and route crossing which eventually
    became major cities (eg. Nagpur)
  • Strategic consideration for cities include easy
    accessibility (eg. Moscow)
  • Administrative/Political (eg. Delhi)

5
1.2 Form structure of cities
  • Irregular transportation has no role
  • Grid easy travel along the two axes
  • Grid with superimposed diagonals better
    aesthetics and easy travel, but complex
    intersection
  • Radial and circular road network

6
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-a
  • 1662 public coach service started in Paris with
    five routes each can carry eight passengers
  • 1828 horse-drawn omnibus started in Paris on 10
    fixed routed with fleet size 100 each can carry
    14 passengers

7
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-b
  • 1832 horse-drawn street railway in New York with
    three compartments with 10 passengers in side and
    10 on top
  • 1863-70 horse-tramway in many cities which
    attracted many working-class because of high
    efficiency, lower fare, flexibility

8
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-c
  • Steam driven omnibus-a failure
  • Fireless steam driven engines only for short
    haul
  • Compressed air system high fuel cost

9
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-b
  • Electric traction using batteries-high cost
  • Cable cars using rollers, pulleys etc.

10
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-c
  • Electric street cars
  • tram lines in US leaded 26782 km in 1880-1902

11
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-d
Motor buses petrol based or diesel
based
12
1.3 Brief history of public transportation-e
  • High-speed rail transit modes

13
2. Urban passenger transport modes
  • 2.1 Classification by usage
  • 2.2 Modes definitions
  • 2.3 Transit system characteristics
  • 2.4 Transportation system evolution

14
2.1 Classification by usage
  • Private transport own use
  • Para transit usually demand responsive
  • Transit common carrier urban passenger transport
    also known as mass transportation usually fixed
    route and fixed schedule
  • Public transportation transit paratransit

15
2.2 Modes definitions Right of way - a
  • R/W strip of land on which transit vehicles
    operate
  • R/W-C mixed traffic
  • R/W-B physically separated, but allows at-grade
    crossings
  • R/W-A fully controlled without any legal access

16
2.2 Modes definitions Right of way-b
  • R/W-C mixed

17
2.2 Modes definitions Right of way-b
  • R/W-B physically separated, but allows at-grade
    crossings

18
2.2 Modes definitions Right of way-b
  • R/W-A fully controlled without any legal access

19
2.2 Modes definitions Technologies
  • Support vertical contact between vehicle and
    riding surface (road, rail, water, air, magnetic)
  • Guidance lateral vehicle guidance (steered or
    guided)
  • Propulsion type of unit and transfer
    (diesel/gas/petrol/electric) and
    (friction/cable/magnetic)
  • Control regulation the travel of vehicle
    (visual/signal/automatic)

20
2.2 Modes definitions Service types
  • Type of trips short-haul transit, city transit,
    regional transit
  • Stopping schedule local, accelerated, express
  • Time of operation regular or all-day service,
    commuter or peak-hour service, special or
    irregular service

21
2.3 Transit system components
  • Vehicle
  • Ways, travel ways or right-of-way
  • Stops
  • Stations
  • Transfer stations
  • Multi-model transfer stations
  • Control system

22
2.3 Transit system characteristics-a
  • Service frequency (f) no of transit departure
    per hour
  • Operation speed (Vo) Speed of travel experienced
    by passenger
  • Reliability of vehicle arrival with less than
    a fixed time duration
  • Safety no of accidents per million km
  • Line capacity (C) maximum no of persons a
    transit system can carry past a point during one
    hour

23
2.4 Transit system characteristics-b
  • Product capacity (Pc) product of operating speed
    and capacities of the line (Vo x C)
  • Productivity the quality of output per unit of
    resources (vehicle-km)
  • Utilization Ratio of output (person-km/space-km)
  • Other level-of-service, service quality, fare

24
2.5 Transportation system evolution
  1. Walking
  2. Private-automobiles
  3. Common-carrier service (taxis)
  4. Construction of arterials
  5. Paratransit and bus transit

25
2.5 Transportation system evolution
  1. Partial separation of modes
  2. Guided transit
  3. Freeways grade-separated wide paths
  4. Rapid transit fully controlled R/W
  5. Fully automated transit

26
3. Vehicle characteristics motion
  • 3.1 Resistance to motion
  • 3.2 Propulsion
  • 3.3 Travel analysis
  • 3.4 Energy consumption

27
3.1 Resistance to motion
  • Vehicle resistance
  • Basic resistance
  • Rollins resistance
  • Way resistance (Track or roadway)
  • Track or roadway position
  • Riding surface
  • Sway oscillation
  • Air resistance
  • Alignment resistance
  • Gradient
  • Curvature

28
3.2 Propulsion-IC engines-a
  • Propulsion provide the force to over come
    resistance to motion
  • Power of IC engine is defined as (HP)
  • Indicated power measured in the cylinder
  • Brake power measured at the motor shaft
  • Effection power at the perimeter of the wheels
  • Tractive effort is a function of speed

29
3.2 Propulsion-IC engines-b
30
3.2 Propulsion-electric traction-a
  • Power of electric motor expressed in KW
  • Hourly ratios maximum power that can be
    produced by one hour of continues operation
  • Continuous ration the maximum power the motor
    can produce in unlimited operation
  • DC motor and AC motor
  • DC high initial torque, easy speed regulation,
    simple control
  • AC lightweight, durable, low transmission loss
  • AC transmission DC motor

31
3.2 Propulsion-electric traction-b
32
3.2 Propulsion comparison ET Vs DT
  • Higher acceleration rate
  • Smoother acceleration deceleration
  • Low noise level, air pollution etc
  • More durable, reliable and cheaper
  • High initial investment and implementation time
  • Low flexibility in routes of operation

33
3.3 Travel analysis-basic variable
  • Distance s f(t)
  • Speed v ds/dt
  • Acceleration a dv/dt d2s/dt
  • Jerk z da/dt d3s/dt

34
3.3 Travel analysis - regimes of motion
  • Acceleration

Cont Speed
Coasting
Braking
Standing
Distance
Speed
Time
35
3.4 Energy consumption
  • Transit vehicles has low consumption in terms of
    HP/kw per person km or vehicle km
  • Transit vehicle still has high absolute
    consumption
  • EC depend on vehicle characteristic (technology,
    design features, capacity,), R/W and operational
    aspects (scheduling, operations regimes.)

36
3.4 Energy consumption-operations regimes
37
4. Bus transit mode
  • 4.1 General characteristics
  • 4.2 Vehicle characteristics
  • 4.3 Bus types
  • 4.4 Operation in mixed traffic
  • 4.5 Preferential treatment
  • 4.6 Service quality

38
4.1 General characteristics
  • Flexibility ability to operate on most streets
    in mixed mode
  • Low investment cost minimum infrastructure,
    quick introduction, and easy changes/extension
  • Limited capacity ideally suited for lightly to
    moderately travelled transit routes

39
4.2 Vehicle characteristics
  • Operation cost cost per capacity decrease as
    vehicle size increases
  • Line capacity increases with vehicle size
  • Vehicle maneuverability decreases with vehicle
    size
  • Riding comfort increases with vehicle size for
    std. bus

40
4.3 Bus Type
Type Size Seats Speed
Minibus 6.6 x 2.3 20 30 40 70
Standard bus 9.7 x 2.5 50 80 40 70
Articulated bus 19 x 2.5 100 120 30 60
Double Decker bus 9.1 x 2.4 65 100 15 50
41
4.4 Operation in mixed traffic-a
  • Bus operation in urban street require least
    investment
  • The average speed of buses are lower than others
  • Equal treatment of transit and other vehicle is
    illogical, often result in high travel cost to
    all
  • Purpose of transportation is to move people/goods
    and not vehicles
  • This lead to preferential treatment

42
4.4 Operation in mixed traffic-b
  • Preferential treatment assume equal rights to
    persons and not vehicles
  • It increases travel speed, increased reliability
    and better in age to buses
  • Bus preferential treatment is the basic
    prerequisite for improving bus competitiveness
  • But popular ratio is that street space is under
    utilized and difficulty in enforcement

43
4.5 Preferential treatment on streets
  • Reserved bus lane
  • Exclusive bus lane
  • Contra flow bus lane

44
4.5 Preferential treatment at intersections
  • Signal design considerations person delay other
    than vehicular delay
  • Exclusive signal phase for buses
  • Special/extended signal-automatic

45
4.5 Preferential treatment on freeways
  • HOV lanes
  • Exclusive bus lanes
  • Preferential entry to freeway

46
4.6 Service Quality
  • Reliability in terms of high frequency and
    adherence to the schedule
  • Riding comfort
  • Safety
  • Area coverage(route-km/km2)

47
5. Rail transit modes
  • 5.1 Rail transit characteristics
  • 5.2 Rail mode types

48
5.1 Rail transit characteristics
  • External guidance minimum R/W high riding
    quality, strong identity, high passenger
    attraction impact on cities
  • Rail technology conical wheel and flange results
    in simple, safe and fast, low rolling resistance
    , at-grade crossing, least affected by weather
  • Electric propulsion clean durable, smooth
    navigation,..
  • Exclusive right of way cat . A

49
5.2 Rail mode types
  • Street car (SCR)
  • Light rail transit (LRT)
  • Rapid rail transit (RRT)
  • Regional rail (RGR)
  • Mono rail
  • Sky bus
  • This classification based on R/W, no of cars,
    power pick up, vehicle control, max speed and
    technology

50
5.2 Rail mode types Street car (SCR)
51
5.2 Rail mode types Light Rail Transit (LRT)
52
5.2 Rail mode types Rapid Rail Transit (RRT)
53
5.2 Rail mode types Sky Bus
54
5.2 Comparison of modes
RRT
Cost per lane
LRT
SCR
Productive capacity
55
5.2 Comparison of modes
RRT
Operating speed
LRT
SCR
Line capacity
56
6. Transit System Performance
  • 6.1 Quantitative performance attributes
  • 6.2 Transit lane capacity
  • 6.3 Way capacity
  • 6.4 Station capacity
  • 6.5 Conclusions

57
6.1 Quantitative performance attributes
  • Basic attributes speed, density, frequency
  • Work no. of. Objects transported x distance
  • Productive capacity product of its capacity and
    operation speed (space-km/h2)
  • Efficiency ratio output produced/resource
    consumed
  • Consumption rate resource needed/ output
    produced

58
6.2 Transit lane capacity
  • Frequency f 3600/h, veh/hr
  • Max.freq fmax 3600/max(hw,min,hs,min) veh/hr
  • Lane capacity C fmaxnCv pass/hr
  • Where hw the way headway,
  • hs station headway,
  • n no of units
  • cv vehicle capacity

59
6.2 Vehicle capacity
  • Total capacity Cv
  • Seating capacity
  • Factors affecting
  • Vehicle dimention
  • Usable area
  • Comfort standards
  • Seat/Standee ration

60
6.3 Way capacity
  • Way capacity Cw 3600 n Cv / hw,min
  • Factors affecting way capacity
  • Distance between vehicles (speed, brakers
    rate,)
  • Vehicle control gate gives (manual, visual,
    positive control of spacing, automate)
  • Operations safety regimes (normal braking,
    emergency braking, instant)

61
6.4 Stations capacity
  • Station capacity Cw 3600 n Cv / hs, min
  • Factors affecting
  • Stopping sight distance
  • Station spacing
  • Acceleration
  • Block length
  • Relation between consecutive vehicle in the
    station

62
6.5 Inferences
  • Capacity is not single, fixed numbers, but is
    closely related to the system performance and
    level of service
  • Operational capacity stretches the system to its
    maximum and it is not desirable
  • There is a significant difference between design
    capacity and the no. of persons actually
    transported
  • Way capacity is different from station capacity
    and it is wrong to compare Cw of one mode and Cs
    of other
  • Theoretical capacities are often different from
    practical capacities

63
7. Planning Issues
64
RADIAL PATTERN
BUS ROUTE
CBD
Suitable for cities with strong central core
around which the development has taken place.
Population density reduces as we move from CBD to
fringes.
65
RADIAL AND CIRCULAR
BUS ROUTE
GROWTH CENTRE
Suitable for cities where the activity centres
are developed along radial corridors.
66
GRID PATTERN
BUS ROUTE
GROWTH CENTRE
Suitable for cities having multiple activity
centres spread uniformly through out.
67
TRUNK AND FEEDER SYSTEM
BUS ROUTE
GROWTH CENTRE
Suitable for cities that have evolved linearly
along a major corridor and the activity centres
are spread parallel to the corridor.
68
BRANCHES AND LOOPS
BUS ROUTE
CITY BOUNDARY
69
Competition or Coordination ?
  • Is it desirable to have coordination between
    various modes or,
  • To permit inter modal competition among various
    modes to yield competitive equilibrium ?
  • Experience of deregulation have shown that
    competition between two bus operators with
    vehicles of different sizes and operating at
    different frequencies may both make money

70
Competition or Coordination ?
  • In case of bus and light rail the likely
    imbalance in financial costs may well make
    profitable equilibrium less likely
  • Competition between high and low quality services
    in the same route may discourage any individual
    operator from offering high quality

71
Lessons
  • It appears that coordination of modes is
    necessary for the success of large-scale systems
  • Some street competition appears to be desirable
    for similar as well as small capacity systems
  • In case of light rail it is recommended that
    there can be competition for the market in
    respect of vehicle size, service frequency etc

72
Integrated System
  • The instruments of coordination include
  • Route network coordination
  • Easy to use inter-modal transfer sites
  • The sale of through tickets and inter-modal
    passes (travel cards)
  • Use of one service to feed another service
  • Avoidance of duplication by parallel services
  • Use of advanced information and communication
    services to allow faster decisions in planning,
    tracking and auditing inter-modal moves

73
Route Network Strategies
Entire network can be planned to optimize
various systems
Feeder Trunk Line concept
Feeder express concept
Transfer
74
Integration Considerations
  • Fare structure
  • All modes and whole area collection outside
    system
  • Information system
  • Vehicle 2-way communication
  • Automatic vehicle location
  • Real time information system
  • Proper information on system

75
Integration
  • TSM actions
  • Deliberately encourage the use of combination
    of modes
  • Para transit integration
  • To be integrated at parking
  • Preferential treatment of HOV
  • Bus lanes
  • Signal preemption
  • Separate streets for buses

76
Conclusion
  • Evolution of Public Transportation
  • Different characteristics of PT
  • Major modes Bus and Rail
  • Preferential treatment for PT
  • Complementary modes
  • Integration of PT system

77
Thanking You
Transportation Systems Engineering Department of
Civil Engineering IIT Bombay
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