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Title: HOW CHAOS DOES NOT DESTROY RIDERSHIP: OPERATIONS OF AN EXCLUSIVE BUSWAY CARRYING MORE THAN 35,000 PASSENGERS PER HOUR PER DIRECTION
Accession Number: 00803800
Record Type: Component
Record URL: Availability: Transportation Research Board Business Office 500 Fifth Street, NW Find a library where document is available Abstract: Busways have been reported to carry up to 28,000 passengers per hour per direction (pphpd). However, recent passenger counts indicate that the exclusive busway in Bogota, Colombia, has a flow of more than 35,000 pphpd. This passenger flow is achieved despite poor operating conditions and a general lack of maintenance without a city busway management and operation authority. Consequently, there is little police control, no systems management, and scarce information for users. These conditions should affect passenger flow negatively, but the Bogota busway carries more passengers than all busways for which data are available. The analysis suggests that the Bogota busway is able to move high passenger flows due to three concurrent and interactive sets of factors. First, the high competition among bus operators provides drivers with an incentive to operate more efficiently. Second, the design provides two lanes, allowing for vehicle overtake, as well as stations that enable six or more buses simultaneously to pick up and discharge passengers. Third, the buses move in platoons along the busway. Each platoon consists of 12 to 16 buses with average 96-s headways. Furthermore, time-distance diagrams indicate that the platoons are not stable, because vehicles keep changing from one platoon to another. The analysis underscores the importance for transit planners of tradeoffs among passenger flows, level of service, and optimal system operation.
Supplemental Notes: This paper appears in Transportation Research Record No. 1726, Public and Nonmotorized Transportation in Other Nations; Women's Issues in Transportation.
Language: English
Corporate Authors: Transportation Research Board 500 Fifth Street, NW Authors: Ardila, ARODRIGUEZ, D APagination: p. 1-7
Publication Date: 2000
Serial: ISBN: 0309067294
Features: Figures
(3)
; References
(12)
; Tables
(4)
TRT Terms: Geographic Terms: Subject Areas: Design; Highways; Operations and Traffic Management; Planning and Forecasting; Public Transportation; Terminals and Facilities
Files: TRIS, TRB
Created Date: Dec 5 2001 12:00AM
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