The Commute Trip-Sharing Problem

Parking pressure has been steadily increasing in cities as well as on university and corporate campuses. To relieve this pressure, this paper studies a carpooling platform that would match riders and drivers while guaranteeing a ride back and exploiting spatial and temporal locality. In particular,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transportation science 2020-11, Vol.54 (6), p.1640-1675
Hauptverfasser: Hasan, Mohd. Hafiz, Van Hentenryck, Pascal, Legrain, Antoine
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Parking pressure has been steadily increasing in cities as well as on university and corporate campuses. To relieve this pressure, this paper studies a carpooling platform that would match riders and drivers while guaranteeing a ride back and exploiting spatial and temporal locality. In particular, the paper formalizes the commute trip-sharing problem (CTSP) to find a routing plan that maximizes ride sharing for a set of commute trips. The CTSP is a generalization of the vehicle routing problem with routes that satisfy time-window, capacity, pairing, precedence, ride-duration, and driver constraints. The paper introduces two exact algorithms for the CTSP: a route-enumeration algorithm and a branch-and-price algorithm. Experimental results show that on a high-fidelity real-world data set of commute trips from a midsize city, both algorithms optimally solve small and medium-sized problems and produce high-quality solutions for larger problem instances. The results show that carpooling, if widely adopted, has the potential to reduce vehicle usage by up to 57% and decrease vehicle miles traveled by up to 46% while incurring only a 22% increase in average ride time per commuter for the trips considered.
ISSN:0041-1655
1526-5447
DOI:10.1287/trsc.2019.0969