Abstract

AbstractBecause of the long planning periods and their long life cycle, railway infrastructure has to be outlined long ahead. At the present, the infrastructure is designed while only little about the intended operation is known. Hence, the timetable and the operation are adjusted to the infrastructure. Since space, time and money for extension measures of railway infrastructure are limited, each modification has to be done carefully and long lasting and should be appropriate for the future unknown demand. To take this into account, we present the robust network design problem for railway infrastructure under capacity constraints and uncertain timetables. Here, we plan the required expansion measures for an uncertain long‐term timetable. We show that this problem is NP‐hard even when restricted to bipartite graphs and very simple timetables and present easier solvable special cases. This problem corresponds to the fixed‐charge network design problem where the expansion costs are minimized such that the timetable is conductible. We model this problem by an integer linear program using time expanded networks. To incorporate the uncertainty of the future timetable, we use a scenario‐based approach. We define scenarios with individual departure and arrival times and optional trains. The network is then optimized such that a given percentage of the scenarios can be operated while minimizing the expansion costs and potential penalty costs for not scheduled optional trains.

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