Technical Papers
Dec 14, 2011

Evaluation of Operational Effects of Joint Managed Lane Policies

Publication: Journal of Transportation Engineering
Volume 138, Issue 7

Abstract

This paper presents a method to evaluate the operational effects of managed lane policies—vehicle eligibility, access control, pricing, and the number of managed lanes—that form a policy combination set. Two macroscopic methods are developed to prescreen the set via simple criteria, followed by integer linear programming with multiple objectives and constraints to identify the noninferior policies among the downsized set. The approach is demonstrated on the Southern California SR-57 corridor. The application eliminates twelve of possible twenty policy combinations by the macroscopic methods, and generates four noninferior policies—the existing high-occupancy vehicle lane operation and three additional potential high-occupancy toll lane policies—in terms of maximum vehicle and passenger throughput, minimum vehicle hour traveled, and travel time variance. The prescreening efficiency of the macroscopic stage, ranging from 0 to 95%, is affected by the initial policies and traffic conditions. It is concluded that the approach can substantially assess a larger policy set and effectively identify the operational effects of joint manage lane policies.

Get full access to this article

View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.

References

Brownstone, D., and Small, K. A. (2005). “Valuing time and reliability: Assessing the evidence from road pricing demonstrations.” Transp. Res. A, 39, 279–293.
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). (2003). High-occupancy vehicle guidelines, Sacramento, CA.
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). (2005). Annual HOV Report, District 12, Orange County, CA.
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). (2008). Annual HOV Report, District 7, Los Angeles/Ventura Counties, CA.
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). (2009). Annual HOV Lane Report, District 4, Bay Area, CA.
Chu, L., Kalandiyur, N., and Benouar, H. (2007). “Priority-based high-occupancy-vehicle lane operation.” Proc., Transportation Research Board 86th annual meeting, Washington, DC.
Chung, C. L., and Recker, W. W. (2009). “An approach to assessing freeway lane management hot spots.” Transportation Research Record 2099, Transportation Research Board, Washington, DC, 141–150.
CLR Analytics. (2009). Model calibration report for SR-57 CSMP, Irvine, CA.
Eisele, W., et al. (2006). Evaluating criteria for adapting HOV lanes to HOT lanes: Development and application of HOT START software tool, Texas Transportation Institute, College Station, TX.
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). (2003). “A guide for HOT lane development.” Washington, DC.
Hsu, J. Y. (1994). Multi-objective decision making, Wunan Culture Enterprise, Taipei, Taiwan.
Jang, K., Ragland, D., and Chan, C. Y. (2009). A comparative safety study of limited versus continuous access HOV facilities, Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA.
Loudon, W. (2009). “Sketch planning assessment of managed-lane options for I-5 freeway corridor master plan.” Proc., Transportation Research Board 88th annual meeting, Washington, DC.
Murray, P., Mahmassani, H., and Abdelghany, K. (2001). “Methodology for assessing HOT lane usage and network performance.” Transportation Research Record 1765, Transportation Research Board, Washington, DC, 8–15.
Nesamani, K. S., Chu, L., and Recker, W. W. (2010). “Policy implications of incorporating hybrid vehicles into high-occupancy vehicle lanes.” J. Transp. Syst. Eng. Inf. Technol., 10(2), 30–41.
Paramics 6.6. (2009). Quadstone Paramics, Edinburgh, UK.
Ravindran, A., Phillips, D. T., and Solberg, J. J. (1987). Operations research: Principles and practice, 2nd Ed., Wiley, New York.
Transportation Research Board. (2000). Highway capacity manual, Washington, DC.

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Journal of Transportation Engineering
Journal of Transportation Engineering
Volume 138Issue 7July 2012
Pages: 882 - 892

History

Received: Nov 30, 2010
Accepted: Dec 12, 2011
Published online: Dec 14, 2011
Published in print: Jul 1, 2012

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Chih-Lin Chung [email protected]
Ph.D.
Institute of Transportation Studies, 4000 AIRB, Univ. of California, Irvine, CA 92697 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
Will W. Recker
Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 4000 AIRB, Univ. of California, Irvine, CA 92697.

Metrics & Citations

Metrics

Citations

Download citation

If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.

Cited by

View Options

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Article
$35.00
Add to cart

Get Access

Access content

Please select your options to get access

Log in/Register Log in via your institution (Shibboleth)
ASCE Members: Please log in to see member pricing

Purchase

Save for later Information on ASCE Library Cards
ASCE Library Cards let you download journal articles, proceedings papers, and available book chapters across the entire ASCE Library platform. ASCE Library Cards remain active for 24 months or until all downloads are used. Note: This content will be debited as one download at time of checkout.

Terms of Use: ASCE Library Cards are for individual, personal use only. Reselling, republishing, or forwarding the materials to libraries or reading rooms is prohibited.
ASCE Library Card (5 downloads)
$105.00
Add to cart
ASCE Library Card (20 downloads)
$280.00
Add to cart
Buy Single Article
$35.00
Add to cart

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Copy the content Link

Share with email

Email a colleague

Share