Abstract

The primary purpose of any transportation network is to provide connectivity between the origin and travel destination. However, given the vehicle oriented structure of the road network in many countries, there are connectivity issues in the cycling network, which has been implemented later. Discontinuities are physical interruptions in the cycling network where cyclists are faced with unexpected situations such as the end of a cycling facility or the change from one facility type to another that are perceived as inconvenient and less safe. The microscopic behaviour of cyclists and the risks they face at these points of discontinuity has not been extensively investigated in the literature. This study aims to evaluate the challenges faced by cyclists at discontinuities by observing cyclist behaviour at these locations and comparing them to control sites using automated video analysis techniques. Our methodology allows the extraction of valuable microscopic data for evaluation of cyclist behaviour at any location. The methodology is applied to a case study of four sites in Montreal, Canada. Using a set of discontinuity measures proposed in a previous work and applied to Montreal's cycling network, video data was collected from a pole-mounted camera at locations with discontinuity and control sites. After extracting road user trajectories from the video data, a trajectory clustering algorithm was applied to find cyclists' motion patterns and the various maneuver strategies adopted by cyclists. Speeds and acceleration statistics are extracted and compared between different motion patterns and between discontinuity and control sites. Results show that cyclists undertake a larger number of maneuvers at points of discontinuity compared to their control sites, and that both cyclist accelerations and speeds exhibit larger variations at discontinuities compared to larger and more stable speeds at control sites.

Highlights

  • Given its many environmental and social benefits, cities are encouraging cycling as an affordable mode of transportation and are investing in expanding bicycle infrastructure

  • Our study aims to close this gap by highlighting the effects of discontinuities on cyclist behaviour

  • 2.1 Factors Affecting Cyclist Behaviour To accommodate all cyclists with different comfort and experience levels, planners and policy makers must have an accurate understanding of the needs of all cyclists

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Summary

Introduction

Given its many environmental and social benefits, cities are encouraging cycling as an affordable mode of transportation and are investing in expanding bicycle infrastructure. Cities around the world are building more cycling infrastructure, increasing the length of the cycling network every year. Past studies have investigated and identified factors that affect cyclist behaviour in different situations, which can be categorised as infrastructural, traffic-related, environmental, and personal. A study investigating infrastructural factors forecasted that the implementation of a physically separate cycling facility would increase the number of cyclists by 55 % (Wardman, Tight, & Page, 2007). Jensen studied the preference of cyclists for different cycling facility types through their perceived safety and found a range in the reported safety levels where cyclists felt most safe on cycle tracks (45 %), less so with bike lanes (30 %) and even the least for shared streets (10 %). Some proposed and implemented solutions to the inconveniences these interruptions pose include the construction of bicycle tunnels under major intersections with high speed and high volume vehicle traffic (CROW Fietsberaad, n.d.)

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