Estimating average distance travelled from bus boarding counts.

Author(s)
Richardson, T.
Year
Abstract

This paper describes the development and testing of a different method of calculating average distance travelled on a bus route that uses data obtained from automatic ticketing machines rather than from sample surveys. Importantly, the method relies only on the locations at which passengers board, and does not need to know where each passenger alights. Rather, a simplifying assumption is made that most bus trips are round trips and that passengers board the bus for their return journey at about the same place as where they got off on their forward journey. The method has been tested against trip lengths estimated from a comprehensive origin-destination survey carried out on National Bus Company buses in Melbourne, Australia in April-May 1994, and has been shown to give very good estimates of average distance travelled. Given these results, it is concluded that the æUp-DownÆ method of calculating average distance travelled provides a better, cheaper and more flexible method of calculating average distance travelled than using sample surveys which measure boarding and alighting location. (a).

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Publication

Library number
I E213872 /72 / ITRD E213872
Source

Road and Transport Research. 2005 /12. 14(4) Pp77-89 (6 Refs.)

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