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    Large-Scale Evacuation Using Subway and Bus Transit: Approach and Application in City of Toronto

    Source: Journal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems:;2012:;Volume ( 138 ):;issue: 010
    Author:
    Hossam Abdelgawad
    ,
    Baher Abdulhai
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)TE.1943-5436.0000371
    Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
    Abstract: Public transportation systems play a significant role in emergency evacuation. Therefore, this paper is geared towards harnessing subway and bus transit to alleviate congestion pressure during evacuation of busy urban areas. Routing and scheduling of transit vehicles and subway operation is envisioned as a new variant of the well-established vehicle routing problem. The model presented in this paper combines multiple variants of the traditional vehicle routing problem while reflecting on the operational characteristics during emergency evacuation, to include (1) multiple depots to better distribute the transit fleet, (2) time constraints to account for the evacuation time window, and (3) constraints for pick-up and delivery locations of evacuees. The evacuation problem is hereafter defined as a multi-depot time-constrained pick-up delivery vehicle route problem. A framework, using constraint programming and local search methods, was developed to model and solve the problem. An optimal spatio-temporal evacuation model was performed first to optimize evacuation of background vehicular traffic, generating transit travel cost (i.e., link travel times) as an input to the evacuation problem. The methodology was applied to evacuate the entire city of Toronto. The results show that the Toronto Transit Commission fleet is capable of evacuating the transit-dependent population (1.34 million) within 2 h on average. The four subway lines of the city of Toronto carry approximately 0.62 million people and can evacuate these people in less than 3 h on average. Toronto Transit Commission shuttle buses (1,320 vehicles) can evacuate the remainder of the transit-dependent population (0.72 million) in approximately 1.5 h on average.
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      Large-Scale Evacuation Using Subway and Bus Transit: Approach and Application in City of Toronto

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    • Journal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems

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    contributor authorHossam Abdelgawad
    contributor authorBaher Abdulhai
    date accessioned2017-05-08T22:02:09Z
    date available2017-05-08T22:02:09Z
    date copyrightOctober 2012
    date issued2012
    identifier other%28asce%29te%2E1943-5436%2E0000413.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/69381
    description abstractPublic transportation systems play a significant role in emergency evacuation. Therefore, this paper is geared towards harnessing subway and bus transit to alleviate congestion pressure during evacuation of busy urban areas. Routing and scheduling of transit vehicles and subway operation is envisioned as a new variant of the well-established vehicle routing problem. The model presented in this paper combines multiple variants of the traditional vehicle routing problem while reflecting on the operational characteristics during emergency evacuation, to include (1) multiple depots to better distribute the transit fleet, (2) time constraints to account for the evacuation time window, and (3) constraints for pick-up and delivery locations of evacuees. The evacuation problem is hereafter defined as a multi-depot time-constrained pick-up delivery vehicle route problem. A framework, using constraint programming and local search methods, was developed to model and solve the problem. An optimal spatio-temporal evacuation model was performed first to optimize evacuation of background vehicular traffic, generating transit travel cost (i.e., link travel times) as an input to the evacuation problem. The methodology was applied to evacuate the entire city of Toronto. The results show that the Toronto Transit Commission fleet is capable of evacuating the transit-dependent population (1.34 million) within 2 h on average. The four subway lines of the city of Toronto carry approximately 0.62 million people and can evacuate these people in less than 3 h on average. Toronto Transit Commission shuttle buses (1,320 vehicles) can evacuate the remainder of the transit-dependent population (0.72 million) in approximately 1.5 h on average.
    publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
    titleLarge-Scale Evacuation Using Subway and Bus Transit: Approach and Application in City of Toronto
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume138
    journal issue10
    journal titleJournal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)TE.1943-5436.0000371
    treeJournal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems:;2012:;Volume ( 138 ):;issue: 010
    contenttypeFulltext
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