Abstract
Driverless or fully automated vehicles (AVs) are expected to fundamentally change how individuals and households travel and how vehicles use roadway infrastructure. The first goal of this study is to develop a modeling framework of activity-constrained household travel in a future multi-modal network with private AVs, shared-use AVs, transit, and intermodal AV-transit travel options. The second goal is to analyze the potential impacts of AVs—including intermodal AV-transit travel—on (a) household-level travel behavior, (b) household travel costs, (c) demand for transport modes, including transit, and (d) vehicle miles traveled or VMT. To meet the first goal, we propose and formulate the Household Activity Pattern Problem with AV-enabled Intermodal Trips (HAPP-AV-IT) that incorporates AV deadheading and intermodal AV-transit trips. The modeling framework extends prior HAPP-based formulations that model household-level travel decisions as vehicle (and person) scheduling and routing problems, similar to the pickup and delivery problem with time-windows. To meet the second goal, we apply the HAPP-AV-IT to two case studies and conduct many computational experiments. We use synthetic activity location data for synthetic households and a fictitious medium-size network with a road network, transit network, residential locations, activity locations, and parking locations. The computational results illustrate (i) the critical role that household AV ownership plays in terms of household travel decisions, modal demand, and VMT, (ii) that with AVs, deadheading accounts for nearly half of vehicle operating miles, and (iii) that AV-based intermodal trips can reduce household travel costs for some households. This last finding suggests that intermodal AV-transit trips may exist in a driverless vehicle future, and therefore, transit agencies and transportation planners should consider how to serve this market.