Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 20 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Planning a high-frequency transfer-based bus network: How do we get there?

Emily Grise    
Anson Stewart    
Ahmed El-Geneidy    

Resumen

As cities have grown more dispersed and auto-oriented, demand for travel has become increasingly difficult to meet via public transit. Public transit ridership, particularly bus ridership, has recently been on the decline in many urban areas in Canada and the United States, and many agencies have either undergone or are planning comprehensive bus network redesigns in response. While comprehensive bus network redesigns are not novel to public transit, network redesigns are commonly being considered in cities to optimize operational costs and reverse downward trends in transit ridership. For cities considering a comprehensive bus network redesign, there is currently no comprehensive easy-to-follow planning process available to guide cities through such a major undertaking. In light of that, this study presents a methodology to guide transport professionals through the planning process of a bus network redesign, using Longueuil, Quebec, as a case study. Currently, Longueuil operates a door-to-door network, and the goal is to move to a transfer-based, high-frequency service while keeping the existing number of buses constant. A variety of data sources that capture regional travel behavior and network performance are overlaid using a GIS-based grid-cell model to identify priority bus corridors. A series of analyses to measure and quantify anticipated and actual improvements from the proposed bus network redesign are conducted, including coverage analysis, change in accessibility to jobs, and travel time analysis. Accessibility to jobs was the key performance measure used in this analysis and is presented as a useful tool for planners and transit agencies to obtain buy-in for the proposed plan. This methodology provides transport professionals with a flexible and reproducible guide to consider when conducting a bus network redesign, while ensuring that such a network overhaul maximizes the number of opportunities that residents can access by transit and does not add an additional burden to an agency?s operating budget.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Minshi Liu, Ling Zhang, Junlian Ge, Yi Long and Weitao Che    
As a fundamental component of trajectory processing and analysis, trajectory map-matching can be used for urban traffic management and tourism route planning, among other applications. While there are many trajectory map-matching methods, urban high-samp... ver más

 
Paola Picco, Maria Elisabetta Schiano, Silvio Incardone, Luca Repetti, Maurizio Demarte, Sara Pensieri and Roberto Bozzano    
A long-term time series of high-frequency sampled sea-level data collected in the port of Genoa were analyzed to detect the occurrence of meteotsunami events and to characterize them. Time-frequency analysis showed well-developed energy peaks on a 26?30 ... ver más

 
Jian Wen, Fabien Leurent, Xiaoyan Xie     Pág. 65 - 74
Control strategies are of crucial importance in operations of saturated transit lines. At a given bottleneck, delay propagates due to an excess of demand over supply. Operators therefore use optimal strategies (e.g. holding, fast-running, train-canceling... ver más

 
Lai Wei and Zhenzhou Yuan    
Timetable design is crucial to the reliability of a metro service. In terms of the delays caused by passengers? boarding and alighting behaviors during rush hours, the planned timetable for a metro line with high-frequency service tends to be difficult t... ver más
Revista: Information

 
Sriganesh Lokanathan,Gabriel E. Kreindler,N.H. Nisana de Silva,Yuhei Miyauchi,Dedunu Dhananjaya,Rohan Samarajiva     Pág. pp. 63 - 73 pgs.
Rapid urban population growth is straining transportation systems. A big data?centric approach to transportation management is already a reality in many developed economies, with transportation systems being fed a large quantity of sensor data. Developin... ver más