A Tale of Side Friction Elements in Dhaka City: From Modeling Real Cases to Revealing Impacts Through Event-Based Simulation

A common problem on the streets of Dhaka, the capital of a developing country Bangladesh, is the reduction in the effective road width and blockage of roads due to various side friction elements. Despite significant efforts to study the effects of side friction in different contexts, a comprehensive...

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Main Authors: Ahmed Mahir Sultan Rumi, Hasan Nahiyan Nobel, A. H. M. Osama Haque, Abu Humayed Azim Fahmid, Tarik Reza Toha, Nouf Alaloula, Najla Abdulrahman Al-Nabhan, Abdulaziz Abdulrahman S. Alnamlah, A. B. M. Alim Al Islam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2025-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
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Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10898009/
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Summary:A common problem on the streets of Dhaka, the capital of a developing country Bangladesh, is the reduction in the effective road width and blockage of roads due to various side friction elements. Despite significant efforts to study the effects of side friction in different contexts, a comprehensive study that efficiently models side friction elements and then analyzes their impacts using a contextually appropriate simulator for heterogeneous non-lane-based traffic in cities like Dhaka is yet to be conducted in the literature. Therefore, in this study, we attempt to fill this gap. Here, based on real data analysis, we list side friction elements that exhibit substantial impacts on the regular traffic flow on the streets of Dhaka, which includes different categories of roadside objects, pedestrians, and non-motorized vehicles. Subsequently, we model the side friction elements using parameters that effectively capture their characteristics. Leveraging the formulated models, we extend our microscopic road traffic simulator, DhakaSim, which has been proven to appropriately simulate the heterogeneous non-lane-based traffic in cities like Dhaka. To the best of our knowledge, the updated simulator is the only simulator capable of simulating heterogeneous traffic of cities like Dhaka while capturing its real inherent complexities, such as a large number of parked vehicles and irregular pedestrian movement. We rigorously validate the updated simulator using Google Maps data and utilize it to conduct an extensive simulation study analyzing the impacts of side friction elements. Our study reveals that the average speed of Dhaka can be reduced by up to 36.55% and the average waiting time can be increased by up to 161.3% due to side friction. Here, pedestrians exhibit a significantly more negative impact on traffic compared to other side friction elements, making them one of the leading causes of congestion on the streets of Dhaka. Moreover, while non-motorized traffic reduces the network’s average speed, it plays a crucial role in maintaining a good flow rate on Dhaka’s low-capacity roads.
ISSN:2169-3536