Title: PRT System Capacity
1PRT System Capacity
CARBON-FREE MOBILITY CONFERENCE
March 6, 2009 J. Sam Lott, P.E. Kimley-Horn and
Associates, Inc.
2Presentation Overview
- Capacity Defining the Issues
- Station Operations
- Main Line
- Station/Main Line Transition Zone
- Vehicle Occupancy
- Conclusions
3Capacity Defining the Issues
4Capacity Defining the Issues
- Safety
- Operational sustainability
- Failure mode recovery/work-around
- Redundant elements More is not necessarily
better - Public perception may negate some solutions
5Station Operations
6Station Operational Capacity A premise for
the near term
-
- As important as line capacity issues are, the
successful application of PRT systems will be
determined by the practical and sustainable
operational capacity limits of the stations
serving the peak demand conditions of the system. - Ref. 2006 PT Expo PRT Stations System
Capacity Implications by J. Sam Lott and Jill
Capelli
7Operational Concept and Station Configuration
- Serial Station Berths
- FIFO with head-end loading position(s)
- FIFO with platooning and simultaneous loading
positions - Parallel Station Berths
- Parallel In-Line
- Parallel Only Berths
8Serial Berths - Head End Load
Unload only Positions
Load and Unload Positions
9Serial Berths Platooning
10Parallel Berths In Line
11Parallel Berths With Reversing
12Conclusions on Station Capacity
- Dwell time is 1 variable
- 2 to 20 sec. in theoretical studies, but
passenger interactions could increase these
values - Communication of loading berth location is
complicated for visually impaired passengers - Extended dwell times required for elderly and
handicapped - Loading and unloading of baggage significantly
impacts dwell times
13Conclusions on Station Capacity
- Number of loading berths 2 variable
- Station dimensions are a practical limit
- Berth configuration (serial berths versus
parallel berths) is 3 variable - Parallel berths reduce dwell and reliability
impacts, but slow down operating speeds
14Conclusions on Station Capacity
- For the first PRT Systems we will implement
(i.e., next ten years), the following are
proposed practical maximums for planning
purposes - Single-sided stations
- 6 to 8 berths
- 500 to 1000 vehicles/hr
- 1000 to 2000 passengers/hr
15Main Line
16Main Line Capacity
- Mainline throughput capacity issues include
- Sustainable operating headway
- Empty vehicle mix
- Average passenger occupancy of loaded vehicles
- Ref. 2005 TRB Capacity Analysis of Demand
Responsive Systems by J. Sam Lott and - David S. Tai
17Operating Headway
- Determined by
- Synchronous control means that provides space (or
slot) for merging vehicles to enter the Main
Line flow - Brick wall stop safety criteria
- Sustainable average spacing between vehicles that
accounts for operational perturbations i.e.,
the real world
18Station/Main Line Transition Zone
19Designations of Operating Zones
- Station Guideway Low speed operations with
special train control considerations - Main Line Guideway Full speed operations under
ATP safety functions - Station/Main Line Transition Zone
Acceleration/deceleration zones where hand-off
occurs between Station and Main Line control
functions
20Vehicle Occupancy
21Vehicle Occupancy
- Determined by the local demographic effect on
travel party size (e.g., of families) - Shared ride options heavily effected by
- Safety culture and physical context
- Trip patterns conducive to shared ride
- Surge flow characteristics
- Empty vehicle management and storage locations
drive the mix of empty vehicles - A new ASCE APM Conference paper by Ingmar
Andréasson - addresses some of these aspects
22Conclusions
23Is Capacity a Big Deal? YES
- Message to Owners/Developers
- PRT is ready for consideration, however
- Suitability must be determined for each specific
application - Operations are very complex
- Hidden capacity constraints can exist
- Solutions applying redundant elements
- may penalize PRT effectiveness
24Is Capacity a Big Deal? YES
- Message to Planners/Suppliers
- PRT is ready for consideration, however
- Dont force fit PRT to all applications
- Be patient and let PRT technology mature before
assuming capacity capabilities - Listen to what transit professionals have learned
through experience -
25Is Capacity a Big Deal? YES
- Message to Transit Professionals
- PRT is ready for consideration, however
- Capacity vs. safety issues are critically
important to understand - Consider the world-wide design context
- Be open minded, while remaining protective of
passenger safety
26PRT System Capacity
March 6, 2009 J. Sam Lott, P.E. Kimley-Horn and
Associates, Inc.