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Public Transport Network Design and Appraisal. - a case study of Porto. Álvaro Costa, Pedro Abrantes and Oana Grozavu Santos Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto 19th Annual International EMME/2 Users’ Conference Seattle, 19-21 of September, 2005. Contents. Introduction
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Public Transport Network Design and Appraisal - a case study of Porto Álvaro Costa, Pedro Abrantes and Oana Grozavu Santos Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto 19th Annual International EMME/2 Users’ Conference Seattle, 19-21 of September, 2005
Contents • Introduction • Re-designing bus network • Network Appraisal Methodology • Impact of LRT Network • Impact of Strategic Bus Network • Local vs. Global Accessibility • Global Efficiency Indicators • Complementarities between EMME/2,Enif and ArcView • Conclusions • Further Research
Introduction • Porto Metropolitan Area pop.: 1.2 mi • New Light Rail (Metro do Porto) • New integrated ticketing system (Andante) • Need to re-design the bus network to improve integration and efficiency • New network design based on “professional judgment” (heuristic method?) • FEUP was commissioned to: • evaluate its public acceptability and efficiency • suggest improvements
Introduction • Starting point: existing STCP bus network (red): 81 bus lines (to be cut down to 50) • Driving force: introduction of the new light metro network (blue) • Problem: Guaranteeing public acceptability and increase efficiency (heavily constrained problem, but poorly defined constraints) • Solution: Iterative, piece meal, client-driven approach (“trial & error”) to ensure feasibility of solution = optimization in the real world • Strong emphasis on GIS analysis of results.
Change in bus service frequency (blue = increase) Re-designing bus network • Design criteria: • Short lines • Modal integration • Homogeneous frequencies (10min) • 20% veh-km reduction • Result: • Decrease in radial services • Increase in orbital services
PT Modeling Approach • Public Transport Assignment Model (EMME/2) • Detailed zoning system: 350 zones covering an area with aprox. 1 million inhabitants (City of Porto: 105 zones and 350 000 inhabitans) • Household travel survey from year 2000. Fixed demand • The match between the two zoning systems was done applying a gravity-type model
PT Modeling Approach Network Characteristics: • 350 centroids • 3266 regular nodes • 8051 links • 7 modes • 9400 transit line segments • 140 lines: 81 present bus lines, 50 future bus lines, 4 metro lines, 4 train lines, 1 elevator
PT Modeling Approach • Network Scenarios: • 10 (Reference case): Current STCP Network + Suburban Railways • 20: Reference Case + LRT • 30: STCP Strategic Network + Suburban Railways + LRT • 3x: Modifications of STCP Strategic Network + Suburban Railways + LRT • Accessibility analysis and efficiency analysis • Impact of LRT network (Scenario 20 vs. 10) • Impact of STCP Strategic Network (Scenario 30 vs. 20) • Impact of the new transport system (Scenario 30 vs. 10) • Impact of the modifications on the Strategic Network
Network Appraisal Methology • Accessibility indicator (GIS plots) : Average generalized travel time by destination zone • Efficiency indicators: Fleet size, Veh-kms, Total trips (operator) Pax-kms, travel time, walk time, number of interchanges (users)
Impact of the LRT Network Change in accessibility between scenarios 10 and 20 • As expected, LRT brings about significant travel time reductions (up to 12 min) • Greatest benefits along LRT • Large gains up to a significant distance from LRT, because of bus-LRT difference in speed (25km/h vs 13km/h)
Impact of the LRT Network Change in bus passenger flows between scenarios 10 and 20 • General reduction in bus pax flows • Small increases in certain suburban/orbital routes • Potential complementary role of bus in new network
Impact of the Strategic Bus Network Change in accessibility between scenarios 30 and 20 • Significant travel time increases (8 min): poorer coverage or service transfer to private sector • Significant gains in some suburban zones (10 min): improved LRT access, successful integration ☺ • Gains from metro outweigh losses from new bus network in nearly all zones (special zones treated later) • Policy implication Metro + SN must be introduced at same time
Impact of the Strategic Bus Network Change in bus passenger flows between scenarios 30 and 20 • Reduction in radial flows, esp. around city centre, due to reduced frequency • Significant increases in orbital flows, esp. towards main metro interfaces • Explains gains away from LRT route bus services play an important role as feeders to LRT
Impact on the pattern of trip interchanges Change in transfer boardings between scenarios 10 and 30 (red=increase) • Concentration of interchanges around key metro stations • Bus increasingly becomes a feeder mode to LRT. Bus-bus transfers decrease significantly • Policy implications: • Improve interchange facilities to take full advantage of new mode • Minimize distance between bus and metro stops
Local vs. Global Accessibility • Problem: Some zones lose accessibility from sce. 10 to 30 • Further investigation showed inconsistencies in network design: • Zones furthest away from metro miss out the most with the new bus network • Those zones also happen to be important centers for surrounding neighborhoods
Local vs. Global Accessibility Diagrams attempt to illustrate the problem • The new bus network improves access to metro stations, which in turn greatly improve access to distant parts of the city • Yet, reduced network coverage decreases local accessibility • As we started by looking at the whole metropolitan area, this problem went nearly unnoticed • Policy outcome: strengthen local bus services
Global efficiency indicators – User perspective • 3% mean travel time decrease from sc. 10 to 20 • Constant travel time from 20 to 30 • 1.5% mean travel distance decrease from sc. 10 to 20 • 1.5% mean travel distance decrease from sc. 20 to 30 • Notice significant pax-kms transfer to metro due to new bus network (+10%)
Global efficiency indicators – User perspective • Metro does not produce an increase in av. interchanges • New bus network actually reduces interchanges • But at the cost of greater walk access time • Still, no increase in travel time
Global efficiency indicators – Operator perspective • 6% decrease in fleet size requirements • 4.2% decrease in morning peak hour veh-kms traveled • Conclusion: Significant savings achieved, while maintaining or improving accessibility by applying simple network design rules • “Operator happy, passengers happy”
EMME/2 - Enif - ArcView • ArcView is a great help in the construction of EMME/2 network files • ArcView is a good tool for “translating” in a friendly image the results of the assignments (especially OD pairs related data) • In both cases, Access is a priceless help • Enif is a useful tool for analyzing data regarding interfaces, boardings, alightings, flows on links
Conclusions • The methodology is understandable to decision makers • Benefits from LRT line are significant, and spread beyond the route • Scale of benefits depends on bus service design bus plays an important feeder role in the LRT network • It is possible to achieve significant gains in accessibility and productivity by re-designing the bus network for better integration with LRT network • Nevertheless there is a trade-off between local and global accessibility in some areas, which is not visible when analyzing accessibility across the whole area
Future research • Schedule the implementation • Incorporate elastic demand model • Introduce outstanding operators and differentiated fare system • Develop optimization algorithms to find the “optimum network” • Test the impact of other policy measures, e.g. bus priority
Questions & comments Álvaro Costa < afcosta@fe.up.pt> Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto Oana Grozavu Santos <oana@fe.up.pt> Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto