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This
section summarizes the recommendations regarding pedestrian characteristics
as reported in the companion volume, Literature Synthesis for Chapter
13, Pedestrians, of the Highway Capacity Manual (Rouphail et al., 1998).
2.1
Pedestrian Space Requirements
Body Ellipses and Buffer Zones
Recommendation. This study
recommends for design a simplified body ellipse of 50 cm x 60 cm
for standing areas, with a total area of 0.3 m2, or roughly
108 percent of the ellipse suggested by Fruin (1971). This
shape (Figure 2) serves as an approximate metric equivalent to Fruin's
ellipse. This study also recommends a body buffer zone of 0.75 m2
for walking, near the upper end of the buffer zone range provided
by Pushkarev and Zupan (1975a) and just before "unnatural
shuffling" commences. |
FIGURE
2
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Recommended
pedestrian body ellipse
for standing areas
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2.2 Pedestrian Walking Speeds
Age
Recommendation. This study
recommends a pedestrian crosswalk walking speed value of 1.2 m/s
(3.9 ft/s) for most conditions, consistent with recommendations
described in the Literature Review for Chapter 13, Pedestrians,
of the Highway Capacity Manual from several sources. In areas
with large numbers of older pedestrians, this study recommends a
crosswalk walking speed value of 1.0 m/s, a nearly 30 percent decrease
from current HCM values.
The question may arise, "What constitutes
large numbers of older pedestrians?" A suggested answer is, "large
numbers of older pedestrians exist when the elderly proportion begins
to materially affect the overall speed distribution at the
facility." Through a simple analysis of a simulated dataset, it
was found that the 15th percentile speed for the overall population
will drop to 1.15 m/s (i.e., at least 0.05 m/s below the recommended
default value of 1.2 m/s) when the elderly proportion increases
to about 20 percent. Therefore, this study recommends the use of
the lower 1.0 m/s value when the percentage of elderly using
the facility in question exceeds 20 percent. Table 1 summarizes
the recommendations. For demographics information, consider census
data at the neighborhood level. Figures 3 and 4 illustrate some
typical users who may benefit from the proposed changes. |
TABLE 1
Recommended pedestrian crosswalk walking speeds.
Facility
Population Above Age 65
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Suggested
Walking Speeda for Time-Limited Walkwaysb
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(% of
all facility users)
0-20
< 20 |
(m/s) |
(ft/s) |
(% decrease from current
HCMc ) |
1.2 |
3.9 |
14% |
1.0 |
3.3 |
29% |
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aIf necessary,
adjust minimum crossing time for platoon flow
bCrosswalks and other facilities
where available user time is limited
cCurrent HCM uses 1.4 m/s
(4.5 ft/s) design crosswalk walking speed |
FIGURE
3

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This
elderly pedestrian, and others like her, may be helped by the
proposed revisions to crosswalk walking speeds.
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FIGURE
4

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The
proposed revisions to crosswalk walking speeds may also benfit
people who are not elderly, such as this pedestrian pushing
a stroller.
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Recommendation. This study recommends that the HCM include
a policy of not correcting for grades less than 10 percent. Above
10 percent on upgrades, this study advocates a 0.1 m/s reduction
in walking speed as an approximation (roughly the amount found by
the Institute of Transportation Engineers in 1976). |
Platoons
Recommendation. For most situations where platoons are
prevalent, this study does not recommend the use of walking speeds
lower than 1.2 m/s (1.0 m/s for large elderly populations).
However, in light of the research by Virkler (1997c) described in
the Literature Review for Chapter 13, Pedestrians, of the Highway
Capacity Manual, this study recommends increasing the minimum
signalized intersection crossing time when typical platoons exceed
15 people. This report details several crossing time computational
methods later.
This study also cautions the analyst to consider impairments to
full usage of the crosswalk. These may include: lack of a stop bar,
lack of high-visibility crosswalk markings, crosswalks misaligned
with the natural flow of the sidewalk, and corner obstructions.
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2.3 Pedestrian Start-Up Times
Recommendation. For simplicity, this study recommends retaining
the HCM's value of 3 s, a reasonable mid-range value between
the 50th and 85th percentile design values (2.5 and 3.75 s, respectively)
for older pedestrians suggested by Knoblauch, Pietrucha, and Nitzburg
(1996) and described in the companion Literature Review for Chapter
13, Pedestrians, of the Highway Capacity Manual. |
2.4 Pedestrian Traffic Flow Relationships
Capacity
Recommendation. Given the comfort zone requirements for
Americans, it seems that walkway capacity lies between 4,000 and
5,000 pedestrians/h/m. For simplicity, this study recommends an
assumed capacity of 75 ped/min/m (4,500 ped/h/m). This study recommends
an assumed speed at capacity of 0.75 m/s. In addition, this study
recommends the pedestrian buffer zone space of 0.75 m2/ped
for a capacity threshold. |
Temporal Variation
Recommendation. This study recommends the use of platoon
flow Level of Service (LOS) considerations (discussed later) in
lieu of a pedestrian "peak-hour-factor" (PHF) or similar measure.
Pedestrian queueing is of comparatively short duration relative
to the vehicular queues that a PHF typically describes. |
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