Estimating incident impacts on urban street travel time in the case of super saturation in traffic lights

Authors

  • Hooman Rahimi School of Civil Engineering, Central Tehran Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
  • Hasan Zoghi Department of Civil Engineering College of Technical and Engineering Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Alborz, Iran
  • Saeed Monajem Department of Civil Engineering College of Technical and Engineering, Central Tehran Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5377/nexo.v33i02.10770

Keywords:

Impact, Urban, Travel Time, Traffic, Traffic light

Abstract

Dynamic signal control strategies are effective in relieving congestions during nontypical days, such as those with high demands, incidents with different attributes, and adverse weather conditions. This research recognizes the need to model the impacts of dynamic signal controls for different days representing, different demand and incident levels. Methods are identified to calibrate the utilized tools for the patterns during different days based on demands and incident conditions utilizing combinations of real-world data with different levels of details. A significant challenge addressed in this study is to ensure that the mesoscopic simulation-based dynamic traffic assignment (DTA) models produces turning movement volumes at signalized intersections with sufficient accuracy for the purpose of the analysis. A new model is developed to estimate the drop in capacity at the incident location by considering the downstream signal control queue spillback effects. The developed capacity reduction models were used to estimate delay due to an urban street incident. The delay was calculated as a combination of the delay due to queuing on the incident link and the increase in upstream intersection control delays due the reduction in maximum throughputs resulting from queue spillback to the upstream intersection The HCS-based method estimated a reduction in delay resulting from the new signal timing plan to be around 3,404 vehicle-hours, whereas the VISSIM shows that the new signal timing saving in delay is 4,008 vehicle-hours. This confirms that the developed method and VISSIM estimation of the benefits are consistent.

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Published

2020-12-31

How to Cite

Rahimi, H., Zoghi, H., & Monajem, S. (2020). Estimating incident impacts on urban street travel time in the case of super saturation in traffic lights. Nexo Scientific Journal, 33(02), 308–320. https://doi.org/10.5377/nexo.v33i02.10770

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