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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling1 Modelling very large Transport Systems Joan Serras Department of Design, Development, Environment and Materials The Open University
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling2 Presentation outline Introduction: a Multilevel Representation on transport systems The TRANSIMS modelling system and its modules A simulation of Milton Keynes using TRANSIMS Conclusions and further work
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling3 Introduction The role of subsystems is essential on the behaviour of very large areas Transport network models available which can address such areas (~10 6 inhabitants) These models represent the road network at one level TRANSIMS is not an exception A methodology has been implemented to generate a multilevel representation using a simulation of Milton Keynes with TRANSIMS
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling4 The TRANSIMS modelling system Developed in Los Alamos during 1990s Forecast the travel behaviour of a study area: information on traffic impact, congestion and pollution Relevant studies: First study (1997): metropolitan region within Dallas (~200,000 travellers) Portland Study (2002): ~1.5 million travellers Swiss study (2004): morning peak simulation (~1 million trips) – 7.2 million inhabitants
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling5 The TRANSIMS modelling system Microscopic approach: travel demand estimated at the person level “synthetic population”: a virtual representation of all the individuals living in the study area Activity-based demand rather than trip-based Urban activity locations defined at the household level Output of the person movement on a second-by-second basis (24h simulation) Parallel computing
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling6 TRANSIMS’ core modules
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling7 A simulation of Milton Keynes using TRANSIMS Purpose of the study: Can we get the data to build a multilevel representation from the TRANSIMS output? Check its functionality in our system (cluster at the OU) Can we adapt it to simulate a non-US city? (synthetic population generation constraints) Significant output? Constraints: Prime use of the software in UK lack of time (PhD period) Lack of resources: only me! Due to constraints: many assumptions were done
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling8 A simulation of Milton Keynes using TRANSIMS Facts about Milton Keynes population (Census 2001): Population: ~200,000 inhabitants (urban area: ~170,000 inhabitants) Commuters (~60,000 commuters): 22,000 people commuting outside Milton Keynes (mainly to London area) 39,000 people commute to Milton Keynes The Milton Keynes road network: A road grid (10 “horizontal” x 11 “vertical roads”) 1km 2 each grid for easy access between them ~300 roundabouts GIS representation: 2630 nodes and 3457 links
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling9
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling10 A simulation of Milton Keynes using TRANSIMS Milton Keynes network From NTFS format to TRANSIMS format No traffic lights, no public transport The synthetic population (Census 2001) US Census incompatibility: new method implemented Household structure (150,000 inhabitants) Commuters (26,000 to MK; 13,000 out of MK) Activity Generation survey from Balcksburg, VA (lack of time – not that different: work, shop, visit activity types kept) Feedback 50 iterations between Router and Microsimulator
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling11 A simulation of Milton Keynes using TRANSIMS Clips on the Milton Keynes model can be seen in the following website: http://design.open.ac.uk/serras/miltonKeynes_simClips.htm
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31st March 2009One-day Conference on Traffic Modelling12 Conclusions and further work A simulation of Milton Keynes using TRANSIMS has been produced at the OU Fairly good results have been produced Significant margin for improvement Currently working on improving the model Data has already been used on a two-level representation More levels need to be defined in order to infer relevant conclusions
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