Macroscopic Modeling, Calibration, and Simulation of Managed Lane-Freeway Networks, Part I: Topological and Phenomenological Modeling
Matthew A. Wright, Roberto Horowitz, Alex A. Kurzhanskiy

TL;DR
This paper develops macroscopic traffic models for managed lane-freeway networks, incorporating phenomena like inertia, friction, and smoothing effects to better understand and simulate their impact on traffic flow and congestion mitigation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel macroscopic modeling framework for managed lanes, including new phenomena-specific models and topological configurations, advancing traffic simulation accuracy.
Findings
Modeling of managed lanes as parallel links with switching nodes.
Inclusion of inertia, friction, and smoothing effects in the macroscopic model.
Framework applicable to different managed lane topologies.
Abstract
To help mitigate road congestion caused by the unrelenting growth of traffic demand, many transit authorities have implemented managed lane policies. Managed lanes typically run parallel to a freeway's standard, general-purpose (GP) lanes, but are restricted to certain types of vehicles. It was originally thought that managed lanes would improve the use of existing infrastructure through incentivization of demand-management behaviors like carpooling, but implementations have often been characterized by unpredicted phenomena that is often to detrimental system performance. This paper presents several macroscopic traffic modeling tools we have used for study of freeways equipped with managed lanes, or "managed lane-freeway networks." The proposed framework is based on the widely-used first-order kinematic wave theory. In this model, the GP and the managed lanes are modeled as parallel…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraffic control and management · Transportation Planning and Optimization · Traffic Prediction and Management Techniques
