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First published January 2000

Analyzing Arterial Streets in Near-Capacity or Overflow Conditions

Abstract

Filtering and metering of traffic at highway bottlenecks influence delay and travel speeds along congested arterial streets. The current Highway Capacity Manual (HCM) method of analyzing urban arterial streets uses the filtering and metering adjustment factor I but does not give recommendations on how to adjust traffic volumes. An improved method of analyzing signalized arterial streets affected by bottlenecks is proposed. A set of equations has been derived to calculate the coefficient I and to adjust the traffic volumes. Conditions in which measured or predicted volumes should be adjusted and conditions in which they do not have to be adjusted are specified. The proposed method incorporates the effect of turning volumes, a feature not present in the current HCM method. A sensitivity analysis of travel speeds along an example signalized arterial street illustrates the filtering and metering effects and compares the results produced by the existing and proposed methods. The differences in the results are considerable. In addition, the significant effect of turning volumes has been confirmed. The proposed method tends to produce travel speeds higher than the values obtained with the current method, which concurs with comments from the users of the HCM that the current method underestimates travel speeds. The filtering equation has been derived with the assumptions of fixed capacity and no vehicle dispersion. Under the conditions violating these assumptions, the filtering equation may underestimate I. Further, the proposed method does not incorporate the effect of long queues blocking upstream lane groups. The negative effect on travel speed estimates along the entire arterial should be limited or negligible.

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References

1. Special Report 209: Highway Capacity Manual (1997 update). TRB, National Research Council, Washington, D.C., 1998.
2. Highway Capacity Manual. TRB, National Research Council, Washington, D.C., 2000 (in press).
3. Van As S. C. Overflow Delay in Signalized Networks. Transportation Research, Part A, Vol. 25, No. 1, 1991, pp. 1–7.
4. Tarko A., and Rajaraman G. Effect of Traffic Metering, Splitting, and Merging on Control Delays in Signalized Networks. Proc., Third International Symposium on Highway Capacity (Rysgaard, ed.), Ministry of Transport of Denmark, Copenhagen, 1998, Vol. 1, pp. 1007–1158.

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Article first published: January 2000
Issue published: January 2000

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© 2000 National Academy of Sciences.
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Authors

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Andrzej P. Tarko
Department of Civil Engineering, 1284 Civil Engineering Building, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907

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This article was published in Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board.

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