Measuring the Gap between Car and Transit Accessibility: Estimating access using a High-Resolution Transit Network Geographic Information System

Author(s):  
Itzhak Benenson ◽  
Karel Martens ◽  
Yodan Rofé
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 23-30
Author(s):  
Muhammad Harum Muhammad Harum

  ABSTRACT: Geographic Information Systems not only handle maps or images, but most importantly is the ability to handle large volumes of databases. The database concept is the center of a Geographic Information System and is a simple system that can only produce output in the form of geographical and spatial data from a region. The Geographical Information System Database (GIS) is formed having a spatial data topology structure, and can be used as basic data. The database is formed automatically from the results of surveys and measurements and the results of digitization of high-resolution image maps so that spatial data information can be obtained, to produce a new Geographic Information System database as a result of the merging of survey data and the results of digitization of image maps.    


Author(s):  
Shirley Hsiao ◽  
Jian Lu ◽  
James Sterling ◽  
Matthew Weatherford

The development and application of transit accessibility measures by geographic information system technology are described. The approach allows transit planners to focus on access to transit routes and bus stops at the neighborhood level and draws attention to the significance of the walk access mode to transit. Then land use, population, and employment characteristics are incorporated into the evaluation of transit service. A case study example of a “what-if” scenario for evaluation of transit service alternatives is discussed. Conclusions are offered about the use and further development of the approach for transit planners.


Author(s):  
Robert Chapleau ◽  
Bruno Allard ◽  
Martin Trepanier

The Société de Transport de la Communauté Urbaine de Montréal (STCUM; Montreal Urban Community Transit Corporation) has recently undertaken the task of computerizing its phone information center, called AUT-OBUS. AUT-OBUS provides callers with optimal route choices within the STCUM transit network. An original system based on geographic and operations data bases combined with interactive path calculation and data processing software has already been implemented. A special geographic information system was developed to process the origins and destinations on the basis of the client's specifications. Multiple forms of spatial referencing are provided: street addresses, trip generators and attractors, monuments, special activities, street intersections, transit references (subway and rail stations, bus routes, terminals, etc.). The best path calculation is carried out by using interactively calibrated impedance functions (walking, in-vehicle, waiting, transfers, fares, and mode restriction). An added challenge was the necessary consideration of the network geometry, commercial speed, day type, trip time, and headway and the validation of the computed paths with existing schedules. For a transit network the size of Montreal's, consisting of 16,000 bus stops, 230 bus routes, and a pedestrian network of 80,000 links and 28,000 nodes, the calculation of the optimal path for a given origin–destination pair is less than 2 sec with a typical personal computer with a Pentium processor.


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