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Capacity Reduction at Incidents

Authors :
Serge P. Hoogendoorn
Henk J van Zuylen
Victor L. Knoop
Source :
Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board. 2071:19-25
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2008.

Abstract

Incidents on freeways cause large delays for road users. These delays depend largely on the capacity at the incident location, which is determined by the drivers’ behavior at the accident location. Few empirical facts are available on traffic operations during an incident. This paper presents high-quality videos of the traffic flow around two accidents recorded from a helicopter. From the collected images, traffic counts have been performed at the exact location of the incident. This has two advantages. First, the capacity at the bottleneck per lane could be estimated. Second, truck counts could be converted to passenger car units at the location of the bottleneck. Counts show that the (outflow) capacity of the remaining lanes is about 50% lower than the (free-flow) capacity of the same number of lanes. This means that the road capacity in the opposite direction is reduced by half by the rubbernecking effect. The capacity of the road in the direction of the accident is reduced by more than half because not all lanes are in use. The images provide information on the causes for the capacity reduction. A leader accelerates and the follower accelerates a short time later. The average time between these two accelerations is estimated at about 3 s, but the video also shows a large spread of these times. The results can be used to assess consequences of incidents, in an analytical way and in macroscopic or microscopic traffic simulators.

Details

ISSN :
21694052 and 03611981
Volume :
2071
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f8fd40697d5f0c912b85971cb08b8a3d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3141/2071-03