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Transportation Planning System Context

Transportation Planning (objectives)


Understand how decisions to build transportation facilities are made Understand basic elements of the transportation planning process Understand basic elements of travel forecasting

The transportation planning process


It has become institutionalized, meaning federal guide guidelines, regulations, and requirements for local planning are often driving forces behind existing planning methods. Have you heard of MPOs (metropolitan planning organizations) like the Mountain Land of Governments or the Wasatch Front Regional Council? Or, have you heard of Envision Utah? It is intended to furnish unbiased information about the effects that the proposed transportation project will have on the community and on its expected users. It is intended to give the appropriate information to those who will be responsible for deciding whether the transportation project should go forward.

Basic elements of transportation planning


Situation definition Inventory transportation facilities, Measure travel patterns, Review prior studies Problem definition Define objectives (e.g., Reduce travel time), Establish criteria (e.g., Average delay time), Define constraints, Establish design standards Consider options (e.g., locations and types, structure needs, environmental considerations) For each option, determine cost, traffic flow, impacts Determine values for the criteria set for evaluation (e.g., benefits vs. cost, cost-effectiveness, etc)

Search for solutions Analysis of performance Evaluation of alternatives

Choice of project
Specification and construction

Consider factors involved (e.g., goal attainability, political judgment, environmental impact, etc.)
Once an alternative is chosen, design necessary elements of the facility and create construction plans

Example : Planning the relocation of a rural road


Step 1: Situation definition: to understand the situation that gave rise to the perceived need for a transportation improvement

Step 2: Problem definition


Purpose of the step: Describe the problem in terms of the objectives to be accomplished and translate those objectives into criteria. Example:

Objective = Statements of purpose: Reduce traffic congestion, Improve safety, Maximize net highway-user benefits, etc.
Criteria = Measures of effectiveness: Travel time, accident rate, delays (interested in reductions in these MOEs)

Step 3: Search for solutions


Brainstorm options at this stage.

Step 4: Analysis of performance


Estimate how each of the proposed alternatives would perform under present and future conditions.

Step 4: Ranking of alternatives (in terms of MOE)

Step 5: Evaluation of alternatives


Determine how well each alternative will achieve the objectives of the project as defined by the criteria.
Improves this way

Costwise best
Improves this way

Improvementwise superior

This is a multi-objective evaluation problem.

Step 6: Choice of project


Based on the alternative evaluation in Step 5, we will choose the best alternative for design and eventual construction. The best choice may not be built because of opposition by the people of the community that is affected.

Step 7: Specification and construction


Once the project has been chosen, a detailed design phase is begun, in which each of the components of the facility is specified.

Urban transportation (demand) forecasting process


This task is a technical effort to analyze the performance of various alternatives. We must define the study area first. Then further subdivide the area into traffic (analysis) zone, TAZ, for data tabulation and analysis.
Homogeneous socioeconomic characteristics: e.g., high-income residential

Minimum intra-zonal trips


Use of physical, political, and historical boundaries, where possible Zones, once created, should not be subdivided into smaller zones during analysis Zones generating and attracting approximately equal trips, households, population, or area Use of census tract boundaries, where possible (easier to collect data from the Census Bureaus publications)

Travel demand model flowchart

Four basic elements of the urban transportation forecasting process


Data collection (population, land use, etc.) Economic activity (employment, sales volume, income, etc.), land use (type, intensity), travel characteristics (trip and traveler profile), and transportation facilities (capacity, travel speed, etc.), population and demography, Origindestination trip data. Analyze the data collected in the data collection stage. You may build mathematical models describe the existing conditions and then use the relationships you have found in the existing parameters to forecast future values. 4-step transportation demand forecasting process

Analysis of existing conditions and calibration Forecast of future travel demand Analysis of the results

Analyze what you get from the 4-stop demand forecasting process

Analysis zones for transportation study (TAZ)

Link-node map for highway system


Link-node maps are the starting point for the 4-step transportation demand forecasting process

4-step transportation demand forecasting process


Preparation: population and economic analysis and land use analysis
Trip generation Determines how many trips each activity (center) (residential area, commercial area, etc) will produce or attract

Trip distribution Determines the origin or destination of trips that are generated at a given activity Modal split Determines which mode of transportation will be used to make the trip Determines which route on the transportation network will be used when making the trip

Traffic assignment

Graphical way of understanding the 4step demand forecasting process


200 trips from zone 46 to zone 29 1000 trips attracted 1000 trips generated

70% this route 25% this route

Auto total: 95%

Public transit: 5%

End.

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