Methodology for selecting the most promising corridors for active transit signal priority deployments.

Author(s)
Dion, F. Rai, S. Le Colletter, E. & Guignard, L.
Year
Abstract

Transit agencies are increasingly considering the deployment of transit signal priority systems along urban corridors. However, the number of parameters affecting the operation of such systems makes it difficult to estimate their expected benefits prior to deployment. To address this problem, simulation can be used, but the modeling efforts required make this approach non efficient for evaluating a large number of corridors. This paper presents a methodology that has been developed for evaluating the potential impacts of priority system deployments along urban arterials without using simulation. The methodology estimates the potential benefits of proposed deployments through consideration of parameters characterizing key roadway geometry, traffic flow conditions, traffic signal operations and transit service elements. An evaluation of the methodology is presented by comparing its deployment recommendations with simulated hypothetical priority system deployments along a 39-intersection section of an urban arterial in Montreal, Canada. For the covering abstract of the conference see ITRD number E211521.

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Publication

Library number
C 38382 (In: C 38346 CD-ROM) /72 /71 / ITRD E211553
Source

In: Transportation without boundaries : proceedings of the 2006 annual conference and exhibition of the Transportation Association of Canada TAC, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada, September 17-20, 2006, 21 p.

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