Modeling PT infrastructure

If you model pedestrians as passengers boarding or alighting in PT, they can be going to the station, waiting there for the PT vehicle and boarding once the alighting passengers have left the vehicle. Alighting passengers follow the routes which are assigned to them as soon as they leave a train or a bus. You can easily model such a scenario with waiting areas, platform edges and definitions of the number of boarding and alighting passengers. (Quick start: defining pedestrians as PT passengers).

You model public transport stops, PT vehicles as well as the associated PT lines by default using the relevant network objects (Modeling PT stops), (Using vehicle types), (Modeling PT lines).

Modeling waiting areas and platform edges

Alighting passengers go to the nearest platform edge which they can reach. This depends on the door via which they leave the PT vehicle. If a routing decision is placed on the platform edge, the passenger continues his walk. If no routing decision is placed on the platform edge, the passenger is removed from the network.

The platform edge and the lane with the public transport stop must be directly adjacent or overlap so that alighting passengers may alight on the platform edge and boarding passengers may board the PT vehicle from the platform edge. In the network editor, use the shortcut menu to can add a platform edge along a public transport stop (Adding platform edges). The attributes Left and Right specify the location of the platform edge parallel to the direction in which you have defined the public transport stop on the link. The number of the platform edge is shown in the attribute Areas of the public transport stop.

If a pedestrian is assigned to be at a platform edge or waiting area of a public transport stop for which no boarding passengers are defined, default values are generated.

Adding alighting passengers

Alighting passengers are added using the setting in the PT Line Stop window (Editing a PT line stop).

Behavior of boarding and alighting passengers

For each PT stop, you can specify whether pedestrians may board or alight on the right or left side or on both sides (Editing a PT line stop). By default, all doors on both sides can be used. Boarding passengers wait in the waiting area of the relevant public transport stop. For this waiting area to be reached by the passenger, the destination of a pedestrian route must lie on it.

Defining doors for public transport vehicles

A door of a 2D vehicle model has the following properties (Defining doors for public transport vehicles):

If you use a 3D model, the properties of the door are derived from it.

Superordinate topic:

Modeling pedestrians as PT passengers