Capacity Estimation at All-Way Stop-Controlled Intersections Considering Pedestrian Crossing Effects

Author:

Yue Rui1ORCID,Yang Guangchuan2,Zheng Yichen3ORCID,Tian Zong4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Traffic and Transportation, Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing, China

2. Institute for Transportation Research and Education (ITRE), North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC

3. Beijing Nebula Link Technology Co., Ltd., Beijing, China

4. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Nevada, Reno, Reno, NV

Abstract

All-way stop-controlled (AWSC) intersections are a typical type of unsignalized intersection that has been commonly used when both intersecting roads have a relatively low vehicular traffic demand. At an AWSC intersection, vehicles proceed through the intersection under a “first come, first served” rule. Since AWSC intersections are often deployed in residential or business areas where pedestrian crossings tend to be inevitable. When a driver who has the right-of-way yields to the crossing pedestrians, the right-of-way at the intersection might be reallocated, which could result in capacity losses to the current approach. On the other hand, the conflicting vehicular traffic movement(s) to the current approach may use this gap and proceed through the intersection ahead of this vehicle. Nevertheless, the effects of pedestrian crossings at AWSCs have not been considered by the existing capacity modeling methods. This research develops a method to evaluate the capacity changes caused by pedestrian crossings at AWSC intersections. Field data collected at two representative sites were collected for model calibration and validation. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to reveal the combined effects of different pedestrian crossing movements and under various pedestrian crossing demands. Results indicated that pedestrian crossing movements could change the capacity at AWSC intersections, but the effects vary according to pedestrian activities and vehicle directions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference28 articles.

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4. Unsignalized Intersections: Two-Way STOP Control (TWSC)

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