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  <title><![CDATA[PhD Defense by Felipe Castrillon]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p align="center"><strong>School of Civil and Environmental Engineering</strong></p><p align="center">&nbsp;</p><p align="center"><strong>Ph.D. Thesis Defense Announcement</strong></p><p align="center">&nbsp;</p><p align="center">Theoretical Analysis of the Effects of Bus Operations on Urban Corridors and Networks</p><p align="center">&nbsp;</p><p align="center"><strong>by:</strong></p><p align="center">Felipe Castrillon</p><p align="center">&nbsp;</p><p align="center"><strong>Advisor:&nbsp; </strong></p><p align="center">Dr. Jorge Laval (CEE)</p><p align="center">&nbsp;</p><p align="center"><strong>Committee Members:&nbsp; </strong></p><p align="center">Dr. Randall Guensler (CEE), Dr. Michael Hunter (CEE), Dr. Kari Watkins (CEE), Dr. Bistra Dilkina (CS)</p><p align="center">&nbsp;</p><p align="center"><strong>Date &amp; Time:</strong> Tuesday, August 11, 2015 at 2:30pm</p><p align="center"><strong>Location:</strong>&nbsp; 122 Sustainable Education Building (SEB)</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p align="LEFT"> </p><p align="LEFT">&nbsp;</p><p align="LEFT"><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p align="LEFT">Bus systems have a large passenger capacity when compared to personal vehicles and thus have the potential to improve urban mobility.</p><p align="LEFT">However, buses that operate in mixed vehicle traffic can undermine the effectiveness of the road system as they travel at lower speeds, take</p><p align="LEFT">longer to accelerate and stop frequently to board and alight passengers. In traffic flow jargon, buses are slow-moving bottlenecks that have</p><p align="LEFT">the potential to create queue-spillbacks and thus increase the probability of gridlock. Currently, traditional metropolitan transportation</p><p align="LEFT">planning models do not account for these negative effects on roadway capacity. Also, research methods that study multimodal operations are</p><p align="LEFT">often simulated or algorithmic which can only provide specific results for defined inputs.</p><p align="LEFT">The objective of this research is to model and understand the effects of bus operations (e.g., headway, number of stops, number of routes) on</p><p align="LEFT">system performance (e.g. urban corridor and network vehicular capacity) using a parsimonious analytical approach with a few parameters.</p><p align="LEFT">The models are built using the Macroscopic Fundamental Diagram (MFD) of traffic which provides aggregate measures of vehicle density</p><p align="LEFT">and flow. Existing MFD theory, which accounts for corridors with only one vehicle class are extended to include network roadway systems</p><p align="LEFT">and bus operations. The results indicate that buses have two major effects on corridors: the moving bottleneck and the bus short-block effect.</p><p align="LEFT">Also, these corridor effects are expanded to urban networks through a vehicle density-weighted average. The models have the potential to</p><p align="LEFT">transform urban multimodal operations and management as they provide a simple tool to capture aggregate performance of transportation</p><p>systems.</p><p align="LEFT"></p><p align="LEFT">&nbsp;</p>]]></body>
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