4.5 Article

A new design and evaluation approach for managed lanes from a sustainability perspective

Journal

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15568318.2018.1519087

Keywords

Emissions; high occupancy toll (HOT) lane; input-output analysis; operating phase impact; secondary impact

Funding

  1. Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment and Economy (ISEEE)
  2. Urban Alliance

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This article presents a comprehensive framework that optimizes traffic management measures to reduce emissions and fuel consumption and evaluates their operating and secondary environmental impacts. A new managed lane strategy is presented that minimizes the total passenger travel time on the freeway. This managed lane focuses on simultaneously optimizing toll schemes on the high occupancy toll (HOT) lane and the operation of the general purpose (GP) lanes. With reduced congestion and thus reduced number of acceleration and deceleration events associated with stop-and-go traffic, fuel efficiency increases and emissions are reduced. PARAMICS microscopic traffic simulator, which considers the behavior of individual vehicles (e.g., acceleration, deceleration, and lane changing behavior) is used to collect traffic performance and emission data for estimating mobility and emissions measures (i.e., operating phase). While previous studies only focused on operating phase impact, this study uses a Leontief input-output (I-O) model to establish the financial flow between industries to capture the large-scale environmental impacts of HOT lane deployment (i.e., secondary impact). The core of the new evaluation approach lies in its capability to provide a more thorough assessment of the environmental impacts of traffic management schemes by quantifying the impacts associated with the interplay between the activities of various sectors and the transportation industry. The I-O model is utilized to assess the indirect impacts of induced demand generated from network improvements and evaluate the environmental impacts of HOT lane deployment in regional economies. The developed approach is applied to The City of Calgary. The results of the study show that the traditional approaches that only evaluate the operating phase impacts of transportation strategies considerably overestimate the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

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