Report On Traffic Speed Study: Ahsanullah University of Science & Technology
Report On Traffic Speed Study: Ahsanullah University of Science & Technology
Report On Traffic Speed Study: Ahsanullah University of Science & Technology
TECHNOLOGY
Department of Civil Engineering
Course No: CE 452
Submitted By
Group 1
MD. Golam Sarwar 15.01.03.119
Enamul Hasan 15.01.03.123
Mahmudul Islam 15.01.03.124
Md. Robiul Haque 15.01.03.127
Md. Rubel Ahmed 15.01.03.128
Husna Ahmed Shithi 15.01.03.129
1
ABSTRACT
Traffic engineering uses engineering methods and techniques to achieve the safe and time
efficient movement of people and goods on roadways. The safe and time efficient movement of
the people and goods is dependent on Traffic flow, which is directly connected to the traffic
characteristics. The three main parameters of a traffic flow are volume, speed and density. In the
absence of effective planning and traffic management of the city, the current road infrastructure
cannot cater the future needs of the city. Pedestrian and vehicle volumes have increased
significantly in the last decade due to the change of the economics of the middle-class families.
Along with which the concern about speed have been rising for a long time. The current work
studies traffic speed characteristics in the city of Dhaka at one selected priority junction. In this
work emphasis was given on traffic speed data collection and the analysis was carried out
through primary traffic flow surveys at Shatrasta bus stop to Tibet bus stop in Dhaka city.
Traffic flow is studied by manual methods. For better understanding of the present status of
traffic flow at the junction, traffic survey is conducted. With the help of the data collection, an
attempt had been made to understand the traffic patterns during different time periods. Traffic
control at that junction is also dependent on the traffic flow characteristics. Hence the results
from the present study are helpful in controlling the traffic at the intersection and also in
suggesting some of the remedial measures to improve the traffic safety in the region.
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Contents
ABSTRACT ....................................................................................................................................................................... 2
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................................................. 4
1.1 OBJECTIVES .......................................................................................................................................................... 4
1.2 OUTLINE OF REPORT .......................................................................................................................................... 4
1.3 Why do we need a speed study ................................................................................................................................. 5
1.4 Scope of Traffic Speed Studies ................................................................................................................................ 6
LITERATURE REVIEW ................................................................................................................................................... 7
2.1 Traffic Speed Study .................................................................................................................................................. 7
2.2 Definition of Speed................................................................................................................................................... 7
2.3 Traffic Delay .......................................................................................................................................................... 10
2.4 Chi-Square Test ...................................................................................................................................................... 10
2.5 Level of Service...................................................................................................................................................... 10
Methodology .................................................................................................................................................................... 12
DATA COLLECTION ..................................................................................................................................................... 14
4.1 Spot Speed Data Collection. ................................................................................................................................... 14
4.2 Travel Speed Data Collection ................................................................................................................................. 15
DATA ANALYSIS .......................................................................................................................................................... 16
5.1 Statistical Calculation of Spot Speed ...................................................................................................................... 16
5.2 Statistical Calculation of Travel Speed................................................................................................................... 20
5.3 Delay Study ............................................................................................................................................................ 21
Discussion and Recommendation..................................................................................................................................... 23
Discussion on spot speed .............................................................................................................................................. 23
Discussion on travel speed ........................................................................................................................................... 23
Recommendation .......................................................................................................................................................... 23
Limitations ................................................................................................................................................................... 24
Recommendations for future works ............................................................................................................................. 24
References .................................................................................................................................................................... 25
3
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
People always try to cope up with time. But this is not as easy as it can be said in few words. To
cope up with time people need speed and for a good speed people need a transportation system by
which s/he can travel to their desired destination in the shortest possible time. But balancing is the
intuitive tendency of nature. When a transportation system offers a good speed then a person try to
use that system as much as possible and then congestion takes birth. This is the ultimate enemy of
speed. If a road system is occupied by a large numbers of vehicles then it is not possible for the
travelers to maintain their desired speed which is the consequence of the congestion created by the
abnormal number of vehicles occupying the road. Here comes the importance of a transportation
engineer. What a transportation engineer does is s/he collects data of a roadway system (Speed
data occupies the most important part of them. It mostly indicates the overall efficiency of the
traffic system), analyze them and then finally provide the most suitable solution of the problem.
1.1 OBJECTIVES
There are several specific objectives of traffic speed studies in this project and is listed below:
To measure the spot speed and travel speed of vehicles and note other related traffic
characteristics.
To present detailed diagram of spot speed and travel speed calculations.
To calculate spot speeds and prepare tables for statistical analysis of spot speeds.
To plot histograms, frequency curves and cumulative frequency curves of spot speeds.
To determine weighted average speed, pace, modal speed, speed limit (85th percentile speed),
design speed, etc. of spot speeds.
To find Time-Mean-Speed (TMS) and Space-Mean-Speed (SMS) using the travel speed and
compare SMS and TMS.
To determine various parameters by using these speeds and also to prove some
relationships.
To draw Speed (Space-Mean)-flow curve based on observed data.
Superimpose typical speed-flow relationship diagram.
To find LOS of the studied road and to draw detailed diagram.
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The report has been documented in the following manner. The first chapter gives the primary
understanding of the problem statement and objectives of the study. The second chapter has been
devoted to review of earlier studies to set the guidelines for the present work. The criteria for site
selection, method of data collection and theory on traffic speed while the methods we adopted in
our data collection system have been discussed in chapter three. Analysis and discussion of
results are given in fourth chapter. The specific conclusions drawn from this study and
recommendations for further work are given in the fifth chapter.
To determine traffic speed through high density neighborhoods in order to show any need for
speed limit signage, traffic calming measures, or additional law enforcement.
To determine proper speed limits, establish the limits of no-passing zones, determine the
proper placements of traffic control signs and markings, and to set appropriate traffic signal
timing.
To verify and evaluate speeding problems, assess speed as a contributor to vehicle
crashes, or measure the effectiveness of traffic control devices.
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1.4 Scope of Traffic Speed Studies
To complete the current experiment of transportation engineering lab-III we have conducted spot
speed and travel speed analysis. We have conducted the delay analysis as well. Below is the scopes
of spot speed and travel speed studies.
Spot speed studies are conducted to estimate the distribution of speeds of vehicles in a stream of
traffic at a particular location on a highway and are used for:
Establishing the effectiveness of new or existing speed limits and/or enforcement practices
Establishing trends to assess the effectiveness of national policy on speed limits and
enforcement
Specific design applications (like sight distance, breaking distance, passing distance etc.)
Specific control applications (yellow/all red timing – the size of dilemma zone depends on
speed)
Travel speed study determines the amount of time required to travel from one point to another on a
given route. Often, information may also be collected on the locations, durations, and causes of
delays. Travel speed is used for:
Efficiency check
Collection of rating data
Model calibration
Collect data for economic analysis (user costs)
Evaluation of performance before and after improvement
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CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW
The purpose of performing spot speed study is because of the traffic speed limit and delay analysis to
measure the efficiency of the Shatrasta bus stop to Tibet bus stop. Our group convey this study in
this roadway to take up the speed survey and carry out an analysis that is feasible, economic, and
easily adoptable. Our study is divided into two parts, one is determining spot speed of vehicles and
the other is to conduct travel speed survey over roadway, study on all classified vehicles.
Traffic speed data are needed for planning, designing, establishing priorities and schedules of traffic
improvements. The traffic engineer must acquire general knowledge of traffic speeds in order to
design speed, safe speed and limit of speed. Spot speed data are used in many traffic engineering
activities such as design, safe and limit speed for roadway, determining traffic signal timing,
roadway capacity, evaluating the effectiveness of improvements, and installing speed zones.
Speed is defined as the travel distance covered by unit time. Speed is expresses as mile per hour or
KM per hour.
In our study to determine spot speed, 44 ft distance is selected and to cover this distance the time is
counted.
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2.2 a. Spot Speed
Spot speed is the instantaneous speed of a vehicle as it passes a specified point along a road. Spot
Speed can be done by following methods-
The stopwatch method can be used to determine spot speed study using a small sample size taken
over a relatively short period of time. The stopwatch method is a quick and inexpensive method
for collecting speed data.
A radar meter is a commonly used device for directly measuring speeds in spot speed studies. This
device may be hand-held, mounted in a vehicle, or mounted on a tripod. The effective measuring
distance for radar meters ranges from 200 feet up to 2 miles. A radar meter requires line-of-sight to
accurately measure speed and is easily operated by one person.
The pneumatic road tube method is normally used for longer data collection time periods than
those of either the stopwatch or radar meter method. Using this method, pneumatic tubes are placed
in the travel lanes and are connected to recorders located at the side of the road.
Space-Mean-Speed is the average of vehicle speeds weighted according to how long they remain
on the section of road. Mathematically it is harmonic mean of the observed speeds. It is given by-
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Where,
ti = observed time for the i th vehicle to travel distance d
N or n = number of vehicles observed d= length of roadway section.
Space Mean Speed is measured by following methods- License Plate Method
Floating Car Method.
Elevated Observer Method.
where,
The desired speed of drivers in low volume conditions and in the absence of traffic control devices.
In other words, the mean speed of passenger cars that can be maintained in low to moderate flow
rates on a uniform freeway segment prevailing roadway and traffic conditions.
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2.2 e. Travel speed
Travel speed is the effective speed of the vehicle on a journey between two points and is the
distance between the two points divided by the total time taken for the vehicle to complete the travel
including any stopped time. If the journey speed is less than running speed, it indicates that the
journey follows a stop-go condition with enforced acceleration and deceleration. The spot speed
here may vary from zero to some maximum in excess of the running speed. Uniformity between
travel and running speeds denotes comfortable travel conditions.
Traffic Delay is the elapse time between the time required to cover travel distance with free flow
and the time required to cover travel distance with travel speed. In our delay study average spot
speed is taken as free flow speed. Delay is found for each vehicle in terms of second. Then Delay
for one day or one year or more time is find out and finally in terms of monetary value delay can be
analyzed.
A chi-squared test, also written as χ2 test, is any statistical hypothesis test wherein the sampling
distribution of the test statistic is a chi-squared distribution when the null hypothesis is true.
Without other qualification, 'chi-squared test' often is used as short for Pearson's chi-squared test.
Chi-squared tests are often constructed from a sum of squared errors, or through the sample
variance. Test statistics that follow a chi-squared distribution arise from an assumption of
independent normally distributed data, which is valid in many cases due to the central limit
theorem. A chi-squared test can be used to attempt rejection of the null hypothesis that the data are
independent.
Traffic delay is directly related to the driver's level of discomfort, frustration, fuel consumption, and
loss of travel time. The following paragraphs describe the various LOS categories-
Level of Service A - Operations with low delay, or delays of less than 5.0 seconds per vehicle.
This LOS is reached when most of the oncoming vehicles enter the signal during the green phase,
and the driving conditions are ideal in all other respects as well.
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Level of Service B - Operations with delays between 5.1 and 15.0 seconds per vehicle. This LOS
implies good progression, with some vehicles arriving during the red phase.
Level of Service C - Operations with delays between 15.1 and 25.0 seconds per vehicle. This LOS
witnesses longer cycle lengths and fair progression.
Level of Service D - Operations with delays between 25.1 and 40.0 seconds per vehicle. At this
LOS, congestion is noticeable and longer delays may result from a combination of unfavorable
progression, long cycle lengths, and high V/c ratios.
Level of Service E - Operations with delay between 40.1 and 60.0 seconds per vehicle. This LOS is
considered unacceptable by most drivers. This occurs under over-saturated intersection conditions
(V/c ratios over 1.0), and can also be attributed to long cycle lengths and poor progression.
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Chapter 3
Methodology
The acquisition of the data, its evaluation and analysis will be discussed below. These are
discussed in order to show the relevant steps in the analysis of the data.
A background of the equipment used to collect the speed data is presented below to
familiarize the reader with these aspects of the provincial transportation agency.
Location: Location of the spot for traffic speed survey is chosen to be from Shatrasta bus stop
to Tibet bus stop.
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Date: Data for speed study was collected on 4 march 2019. It was Monday.
Time: Time of data collection for volume study was different for different groups however
for group-1 the time was from 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm
Observation: Classified Vehicle Counts.
Duration: 30 minutes for spot speed study and 30 minutes for travel speed study.
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CHAPTER 4
DATA COLLECTION
To check the distribution pattern by fitting normal distribution curve, CAR is selected. Here the
all CAR spot speed data is given below:
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4.2 Travel Speed Data Collection
Travel speed is the effective speed of the vehicle on a journey between two points and is the
distance between the two points divided by the total time taken for the vehicle to complete the
travel including any stopped time. Travel speed data is shown here below for CAR:
Speed
Distance Time
Veh. No. (mph)
(m) (sec)
vi
15
CHAPTER 5
DATA ANALYSIS
=22.83 mph
16
40.00
35.00
30.00
25.00
20.00
Modal Speed = 26 mph
15.00
10.00
5.00
0.00
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
-5.00
Spot Speed, mph
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Cumulative Frequency Curve
110.00
105.00
100.00 Design Speed
95.00
90.00
85.00 85th Percentile
80.00 Speed
75.00
70.00
Cumulative Frequency
65.00
60.00
55.00
50.00 50th Percentile
45.00 Speed
40.00
35.00
30.00
25.00
20.00 15th Percentile
22.9 26 28.3
15.00 Speed 18.5 Mph mph
10.00 mph
5.00
Mph
0.00
-5.00 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
-10.00
Spot Speed, mph
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Speed Histogram
12
10
10
8
8
7
Frequency
4
3
2
2
0 0 0
0
10--13 13-16 16-19 19-22 22-25 25-28 28-31 31-34
Speed Range (mph)
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5.2 Statistical Calculation of Travel Speed
TMS or SMS or
Speed
Arithmatic Harmonic
Veh. No. (mph) (Vi-Vt)2
Mean (Vt) Mean (Vs)
Vi
(mph) (mph)
1 12.24 5.51
2 14.92 0.11
3 13.94 0.42
4 17.70 9.72
5 15.74 1.34
14.59 14.46
6 14.17 0.17
7 14.92 0.11
8 13.61 0.96
9 14.92 0.11
10 13.72 0.76
Total 19.20
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5.3 Delay Study
Vehicle Passeng
Avg. Avg. Vehicle Vehicle
Total delay Vehicle Delay of er time Total
Spot Travel Delay No. of operatin operatin
Vehicle Delay cost Occupan Passeng value Cost/2hr
Speed Speed (sec) Vehicle g Cost g Travel
(hour) (Tk/veh. cy er (hr) (TK per Tk
(mile/hr) (mile/hr) TK Cost TK
hr) pass. Hr)
CAR 22.83 14.46 266.67 2743 203.187 100 20318 2.1 426.693 20 8533 17066
Total cost in 1
Total cost in 2 Total cost in 1
Route year million TK.
Hour TK. day TK.
Shatrasta
to Tibet 17066 204792 74.749
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Table 5.9 Time mean speed, space mean speed and flow for all group.
Group 1 2 3 4
15.2
15.1
15
Space Mean Speed, mph
14.9
14.8
14.7
14.6
14.5
14.4
14.3
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 4500
Flow(pcu/hr)
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Chapter 6
We collected data of a large number of vehicles from either side but we were successful to
collect only a few number of buses and private cars speed data.
Recommendation
The buses we observed on the road were too much old that they could not maneuver easily
although the maneuverability of buses is originally low. So replacing these old buses with
new ones is highly recommended.
Bicycle should have specific lanes of their own which typically is placed beside the
footpath/shoulder. But there was not any specific lane in the road we studied. So it is
recommended that a lane system should be introduced to increase efficiency of the road at the
same time there should be a bicycle specific lane.
NMT or electrical low speed vehicles should not be permitted in this type of arterial road.
Although they typically travel on the left lane but they create a drag force which slows down the
high speed vehicles which creates congestion.
There were some large container trucks observed on the road. Congestion can be slightly
avoided if these vehicles were allowed only at off peak hours.
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Limitations
The major limitation of this volume study was the survey was conducted for 15 minutes only,
whereas for proper results the survey should be conducted for at least 3 hours.
We collected data for representative portion of traffic stream. However if it was possible to
collect data for each and every type of vehicle then a better scenario could have been
presented.
The present study is focused mainly on traffic speed only. Various other experiments could be
conducted depending on the data we had in out possession. However due to lack of time we
conduct those extensive experiments and it is suggested that those studies should be conducted
in future to have a good understanding of the traffic condition of the roadway we studied in
this time.
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References
Currin, T. R. 2001. Spot Speed Study. In Introduction to Traffic Engineering: A Manual for
Data Collection and Analysis, ed. B. Stenquist. Stamford, Conn.: Wadsworth Group, pp. 4–12.
Parma, K. 2001. Survey of Speed Zoning Practices: An Informational Report. Washington, D.C.:
Institute of Transportation Engineers.
Persaud, Bhagwant, Parker, Martin Jr., and Gerald Wilde. 1997. Safety, speed and speed
management. Transportation Canada Repor. Ottawa Canada.
Pline, James L. editor. 1999. Traffic Engineering Handbook. Institute of Transportation
Mannering, Fred L. Walter P. Kilarski. 1998. Principles of Highway Engineering and Traffic
National Research Council. 1998. Highway Capacity Manual; Special Report 209. 3rd
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