Interactive Bike Lane Planning using Sharing Bikes' Trajectories

Abstract

Cycling as a green transportation mode has been promoted by many governments all over the world. As a result, constructing effective bike lanes has become a crucial task to promote the cycling life style, as well-planned bike lanes can reduce traffic congestions and safety risks. Unfortunately, existing trajectory mining approaches for bike lane planning do not consider one or more key realistic government constraints: 1) budget limitations, 2) construction convenience, and 3) bike lane utilization. In this paper, we propose a data-driven approach to develop bike lane construction plans based on the large-scale real world bike trajectory data collected from Mobike, a station-less bike sharing system. We enforce these constraints to formulate our problem and introduce a flexible objective function to tune the benefit between coverage of users and the length of their trajectories. We prove the NP-hardness of the problem and propose greedy-based heuristics to address it. To improve the efficiency of the bike lane planning system for the urban planner, we propose a novel trajectory indexing structure and deploy the system based on a parallel computing framework (Storm) to improve the system’s efficiency. Finally, extensive experiments and case studies are provided to demonstrate the system efficiency and effectiveness.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Start Page
1
Number of Pages
1
Date Published
03
ISSN Number
1041-4347