New Perspectives, Innovative Strategies and Integrated Approaches NTOC Talking Operations Web Conference June–July 2008 MANAGING TRAVEL DEMAND TO MITIGATE.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CITY LOGISTICS “Is the process of totally optimising the logistics and transport activities by private companies in urban areas while considering the traffic.
Advertisements

Transportation leadership you can trust. presented to ITS Georgia 2005 Annual Meeting presented by Kenny Voorhies Cambridge Systematics, Inc. August 29,
Chris Albrecht, AICP I-Walk Webinar March 1, 2011 Transportation Research, Data, and Safe Routes to School.
How can we relieve congestion in the I-95 corridor? I-95 Congestion Relief Study.
Feb Travel Time and Sustainable Travel Behaviour David Metz Centre for Transport Studies University College London.
Introduction to Freight Transportation Unit 1: Defining the Freight System.
Transportation Data Palooza Washington, DC May 9, 2013 Steve Mortensen Federal Transit Administration Data for Integrated Corridor Management (ICM) Analysis,
Risto Kulmala 1 Guidelines for Evaluation of ITS Projects Risto Kulmala VTT Communities and Infrastructure.
11 Quantifying Benefits of Traffic Information Provision under Stochastic Demand and Capacity Conditions: A Multi-day Traffic Equilibrium Approach Mingxin.
Congestion Reduction Using Intelligent Transportation Systems Ben Sperry University of Evansville University of Evansville MESCON March 25, 2006.
Operations Planning Organizing for Travel Time Reliability Ohio Planning Conference July 15, 2014.
Federal Scans and Transferability to Washington State California MICM Workshop Los Angeles, Dec. 5, 2007 Eric N.Schreffler (ESTC) and Craig Stone (WSDOT)
ICM San Antonio – IH-10 Corridor Brian Fariello, TxDOT.
Analytical Needs SEMCOG Travel Model Improvement Program Donnelly, Davidson, Binkowski & Arens 12-Dec-2011.
Transportation leadership you can trust. presented to Talking Operations Webinar presented by Richard Margiotta Cambridge Systematics, Inc. June 28, 2006.
Freight Bottleneck Study Update to the Intermodal, Freight, and Safety Subcommittee of the Regional Transportation Council September 12, 2002 North Central.
Transportation leadership you can trust. presented to Talking Freight Seminar presented by Richard Margiotta Cambridge Systematics, Inc. September 21,
TRB Transportation Planning Applications Conference Incorporating Pricing Strategies US Department of Transportation Incorporating.
Incorporating Management and Operations and the Congestion Management Process into Metropolitan Transportation Planning FHWA/FTA Webinar June 24, 2008.
Fast Forward Full Speed Ahead Presented at the Joint ITS Georgia / Tennessee Annual Meeting September 25, 2006 by Carla W. Holmes, P.E., PTOE Georgia Department.
Almada Final Conference 21 October 2011 FLIPPER FL exible transport services and I CT P latform for eco-mobility in urban and rural Euro PE an a R eas.
A Case Study of Promoting Metropolitan Freight Collaboration: The Twin Cities Experience Performance Management Framework Minnesota Department of Transportation.
TSM&O FLORIDA’S STATEWIDE IMPLEMENTATION Elizabeth Birriel, PEElizabeth Birriel, PE Florida Department of TransportationFlorida Department of TransportationTranspo2012.
Active Traffic Management: The Next Step in Congestion Management NTOC Webinar Presented by Jessie Yung, P.E. Office of Transportation Management April.
Pat Bursaw, Minnesota DOT International Partnership Meeting Washington D.C. January 26, 2012.
National Multimodal Freight Trends/Issues/Forecasts/ Policy Implications.
Washington Update Paul Feenstra ITS America / Keystone Public Affairs.
 Scotland’s National Transport Strategy A Consultation.
Proposed National Unified Goal For Traffic Incident Management Working Together for Improved Safety, Clearance and Communications.
ITS : A National and Regional Perspective Tony Kane American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials ITS –DC DOT Workshop Howard University.
1 IntelliDrive SM Research, Development and Emerging Technologies National ITS Perspective Panel Joseph I. Peters, Ph.D. Federal Highway Administration.
1 25 th International Conference on IIPS, AMS Annual Meeting, Phoenix, AZ An Update on FHWA Road Weather Management Initiatives Paul Pisano Federal Highway.
Jeffrey F. Paniati Associate Administrator for Operations Federal Highway Administration US Department of Transportation Looking Forward to a High Performance.
Managing Travel Demand – Making the Health Connection Results from European Scanning Trip Presented at: Healthy Regions, Healthy People Lake Arrowhead,
Transportation leadership you can trust. presented to FHWA “Talking Freight” Seminar Series presented by Lance Neumann Cambridge Systematics, Inc. August.
Transit and the Evolving Intelligent Transportation System: Federal Transit Administration Perspective Walter Kulyk, P.E. Director, Office of Mobility.
MARYLAND FREIGHT SUMMIT Freight in the Mid-Atlantic Region Jeffrey F. Paniati Associate Administrator for Operations Federal Highway Administration September.
Mike Schagrin US Department of Transportation ITS Joint Program Office IntelliDrive Safety Program Overview.
The Fully Networked Car Geneva, 4-5 March Ubiquitous connectivity to improve urban mobility Hermann Meyer ERTICO.
US DOT Planning for Operations Initiative – An Update AASHTO SCOH Annual Meeting June 14-17, 2009 Manchester, NH Rick Backlund – FHWA Office of Operations.
1 Industry Plenary and Round Table 16 th World Congress Stockholm 2009 Steve Heminger Executive Director Metropolitan Transportation Commission San Francisco.
Managing Travel for Planned Special Events: What, Why, & Benefits Walt Dunn, P.E. Dunn Engineering Associates, P.C. Talking Operations Seminar January.
Highway Transportation Engineering ITS Case Study Component 1 – Student Guide.
Transportation leadership you can trust. presented to Safety Data Analysis Tools Workshop presented by Krista Jeannotte Cambridge Systematics, Inc. March.
Capacity and Service to Road Users Task 05: To optimise the capacity of the road network Mike Wilson, Bristol 27 January 2006.
1 Using Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Technologies and Strategies to Better Manage Congestion Jeffrey F. Paniati Associate Administrator of.
Phase 2: Data Collection Findings and Future Steps.
Transportation Operations Goals and Accomplishments Institute of Transportation Engineers 2001 Spring Conference and Exhibit Dr. Christine Johnson D irector,
U.S. Freight Railroad Infrastructure: Current and Future Issues Craig F. Rockey Vice President - Policy and Economics Association of American Railroads.
Abstract Background Methodology Methods While the project is in the data-collection and background research phase, there are several studies that utilize.
Traveler Information Applications: How Can VII Improve the Quality of Travel? TRB Session 644: Using VII Data, Part 1 Ben McKeever, US DOT, ITS Joint Program.
Regional Concept for Transportation Operations: An action plan to address transportation operations in Southeast Michigan Talking Technology & Transportation.
A National Unified Goal for Traffic Incident Management (TIM): What is it, and why is it needed? ITS PCB T3 Webinar September 11, 2008.
NTOC National Summit November 7, 2011 Washington, DC Aliyah Horton Douglas E. Noble, P.E., PTOE Aliyah Horton Douglas E. Noble, P.E., PTOE Operations:
BEL 311 ENGLISH FOR ACADEMIC PURPOSES By Mohd Zuhairi Bin Mohd Zin Muhammad Haiqal Bin Kassim.
1 USDOT Congestion Initiative Baltimore – Washington Regional Traffic Signal Forum Maritime Institute Linthicum, MD March 14, 2007 Regina McElroy Director,
Freight Transportation Plan Savannah, GA AMPO Conference - October 23, 2014.
North American Motorcoach Travel: A Green & Safe Alternative 5 th European Bus & Coach Forum International Road Union Kortrijk Xpo, Belgium October 2007.
Part One PRICING AND INSTITUTIONAL STRATEGIES TO MANAGE DEMAND MANAGING TRAVEL DEMAND TO MITIGATE CONGESTION donpeat.com.
Chapter 12: Urban Transportation Policy “Everything in life is somewhere else, and you get there in a car.” E. B. White, One Man’s Meat, (NY: Harper &
New Planning Paradigm 18 April 2013.
Integrated Dynamic Travel Models: Recent SHRP2 Projects
Truck parking – analytical challenges
1st November, 2016 Transport Modelling – Developing a better understanding of Short Lived Events Marcel Pooke – Operational Modelling & Visualisation Manager.
Federal Scans and Transferability to Washington State
MODULE 5: TSMO to Improve Reliability
What is TSMO? TSMO encompasses a broad set of strategies that aim to optimize the safe, efficient, and reliable use of existing and planned transportation.
What is TSMO? TSMO encompasses a broad set of strategies that aim to optimize the safe, efficient, and reliable use of existing and planned transportation.
MODULE 5: TSMO to Improve Reliability
Module 2: TSMO Strategies
Presentation transcript:

New Perspectives, Innovative Strategies and Integrated Approaches NTOC Talking Operations Web Conference June–July 2008 MANAGING TRAVEL DEMAND TO MITIGATE CONGESTION donpeat.com

INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW MANAGING TRAVEL DEMAND TO MITIGATE CONGESTION donpeat.com

Road Map for the Series Introduction Pricing Strategies Institutional Strategies Infrastructure Strategies Operational Strategies Integration Schreffler June 19 July 10 June 26 Overview

International Scanning Study FHWA International Technology Scanning Program Sponsored by FHWA, AASHTO, and NCHRP Managing Travel Demand Scan in Summer 2005 Minnesota, Utah, Florida and New Jersey DOTs FHWA (3) Metropolitan Transportation Commission (Oakland) Visited Rome, Stockholm, Lund, Cologne, Rotterdam, Delft and London Report available from FHWA International Program FHWA

THE NEED: Travel Demand Growth and Supply FHWA, 2006

THE NEED: The Cost of Congestion TTI’s 2007 Urban Mobility Report:* Driver’s in 85 urban areas experienced 4.2 billion hours of delay Wasted 2.9 billion gallons of fuel Total cost in wasted time and fuel = $78 billion * based on 2005 data

DEFINITION: What is Managing Travel Demand? Managing travel demand is about providing travelers, regardless of whether they drive alone, with travel choices, such as work location, route, time of travel and mode. In the broadest sense, “demand management is defined as providing travelers with effective choices to improve travel reliability.” * * FHWA, 2006

TRAVEL MARKETS AND APPLICATIONS TRAVEL MARKETS Work School Leisure Shopping APPLICATION SETTINGS Worksites New Developments Schools Special Event Venues Incidents and Emergencies Recreation and Tourist Sites Airports Corridors Sub-areas Regions

CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK: Traffic vs. Travel Demand Management Source: AVV and FHWA

LESSONS LEARNED FROM EUROPE 1.Transportation Management Thinking Is Evolving In Europe 2.Demand Management Differs From Traffic Management 3.Owners and Service Providers are Working Together 4.Demand Management Can Be Integrated Into Planning, Projects and Operations 5.Economic Growth and Traffic Management Can Co-Exist 6.Road Pricing Proven Effective 7.Customized Travel Time Prediction Is Possible 8.Dynamic Signing Can Influence Safety and Operations 9.Pre-Trip and Near Trip Information Can Influence Congestion 10.Performance-based Evaluation Integrated Into Processes and Policies U.S. has a lot of experience with managing demand, but not as good at integrating into planning, management and operations

AND AWAY WE GO…