Affiliation:
1. Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo-Engineering, University of Minnesota, 500 Pillsbury Drive Southeast, Minneapolis, MN 55455.
Abstract
Long-term, regional travel demand models are essential tools used by planning organizations for resource management, project scheduling, and impact studies. Developed primarily at the macroscopic level, these tools lack sufficient detail to capture the influence of local geometry, dynamic traffic controls, or advanced transportation demand management strategies. To bridge the gap, a hybrid mesoscopic–microscopic model was developed. The core of the model, surrounding two light rail corridors in Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Minnesota (the Twin Cities), was developed at high resolution for microscopic simulation to capture the interaction between traffic signals, transit systems, and the road network. The remainder of the greater Twin Cities area was implemented according to the regional planning model (RPM) maintained by the Metropolitan Council. Interfacing the AIMSUN-based hybrid model with the CUBE-based RPM, the Twin Cities metro hybrid simulation was used to improve mode choice and traffic assignment iteratively to achieve a dynamic user equilibrium state. Significant lessons were learned about the effort needed to develop and to maintain such a model, with implications for future large-scale regional modeling.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering
Reference8 articles.
1. AIMSUN 8 Dynamic Simulators Users’ Manual. Transport Simulation Systems, Barcelona, Spain, 2014.
2. Hybrid Traffic Simulation with Adaptive Signal Control
3. Final Report for the Development of the I-96 Dynamic Traffic Assignment (DTA) Model. Parsons Brinckerhoff, New York, 2012.
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