4.3 Article

Evaluating crowding in individual train cars using a dynamic transit assignment model

Journal

TRANSPORTMETRICA B-TRANSPORT DYNAMICS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 693-711

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/21680566.2021.1939808

Keywords

Public transport; transit assignment; crowding; agent-based simulation; passenger distribution

Funding

  1. Stockholm County Council (SLL)
  2. Swedish National Transport Administration (Trafikverket)
  3. TRENoP Strategic Q2Research Area

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With the growth of travel demand in cities worldwide, overcrowding in public transport has become a major issue. Different measures ranging from investments to real-time operational measures have been proposed to address congestion. This study focuses on evaluating the impact of these measures by considering the distribution of passengers among train cars, finding that it can significantly affect user costs.
As travel demand grows in many cities around the world, overcrowding in public transport systems has become a major issue and has many negative effects for both users and operators. Measures to address on-board congestion span from large-scale strategic investments (e.g. increasing infrastructure capacity), through tactical planning (e.g. stopping pattern) to real-time operational measures (e.g. information provision, gate and escalator control). Thus there is a need to evaluate the impact of these measures prior to their implementation. To this end, this study aims at capturing the effective capacity utilization of the train, by considering passengers' distribution among individual train cars into an agent-based simulation model. The developed model is validated and applied to a case study for the Stockholm metro network. The findings suggest that an increase in peak hour demand leads to a more even passenger distribution among individual train cars, which partially counteracts the increased disutility caused by the higher passenger volumes. Interestingly, the closure of the most popular entrance point at one of the stations leads to lower train crowding unevenness at the downstream stops and consequently reduces passengers' experienced discomfort. We find that the user cost is significantly underestimated when passenger distribution among cars is not accounted for.

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