Skip to main content

Fast moving walkways could move 7,000 people per hour

Researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) researchers have been studying futuristic transport solutions for car-free urban centres and have come up with an optimal design for a network of accelerating moving walkways. This is not a new concept – the first moving walkways were seen in Chicago in 1893 and seven years later they were used at the world’s fair in Paris. They are also regularly used the world over in airports and transport terminals. As part of the PostCarW
November 28, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) researchers have been studying futuristic transport solutions for car-free urban centres and have come up with an optimal design for a network of accelerating moving walkways.

This is not a new concept – the first moving walkways were seen in Chicago in 1893 and seven years later they were used at the world’s fair in Paris. They are also regularly used the world over in airports and transport terminals.

As part of the PostCarWorld initiative, which aims to explore the future of mobility both through the role of the car and without cars, EPFL researchers have analysed the feasibility of fast moving walkways in an urban setting, with encouraging results.

The team’s task consisted of imagining a world or a city without private cars in which space designed for automobile use could be repurposed. Individual transport needs would be met by a combination of conventional methods such as buses, metros, trams, taxis, bikes, etc., or by more innovative methods like bike- or car-sharing or urban cable cars. The EPFL’s Transport and Mobility Laboratory studied accelerating moving walkways, which can travel up to 15 km/h, the average speed at which people travel through most large cities during rush hour, to see if they could compete with other means of transport.

The researchers used real data from Geneva in developing their mathematical model, exploring various configurations of speed, acceleration, length and width, as well as intersections and entry and exit points.

They focused on the feasibility of a network of moving walkways and attempted to come up with the optimal design, taking into account the road network, demand, the speed required to make the system competitive, energy consumption and operational and budgetary constraints.

Their ideal network begins with a small ring around a car-free urban centre and extends out along primary roads on 47 different links equipped with 10 gates for a total length of 32 kilometres. There are 37 intersections where expressways would be set up using bridges or underpasses. A walkway can handle 7,000 passengers per hour, while a roadway can accommodate between 750 and 1,800 vehicles.

According to the report authors, electric moving walkways represent a sustainable and eco-friendly transport system and their operating cost is similar to that of buses. “The main downside is the cost of construction. It will cost about as much to install one line as to build a new tram line,” says lead author Riccardo Scarinci. “But the cost could drop if the system were installed on a large scale. That’s why a network of walkways only makes sense in dense and highly congested cities.”

Michel Bierlaire, the director of the Transport and Mobility Laboratory, commented, “This study proves that the concept is credible and that a car-less, pedestrian-centric city is conceivable. This is a useful starting point for urban planners to evaluate the feasibility of accelerating moving walkways.”

Related Content

  • February 12, 2013
    Induct introduces the Navia fully-electric driverless shuttle
    French mobility solutions specialist Induct recently announced its first delivery of Navia, the self-driving electric shuttle developed under a partnership with Switzerland’s Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL). According to Induct, Navia is the first automated electric shuttle offering an environment-friendly alternative to public transport and private cars in urban areas. The automated driverless electric vehicle carries up to eight passengers at a maximum speed of 20 km/h, and was designed t
  • March 15, 2023
    How the metaverse will transform the future of mobility
    Digital development has never been as rapid and disruptive as it is today. The metaverse and technologies such as AR and MR will transform our lives and businesses - including transport planning and shaping the mobility ecosystem, says Christian Haas of UMovity
  • September 16, 2014
    Researchers devise snow ploughing algorithm
    Canadian researchers Olivier Quirion-Blais, Martin Trépanier and André Langevin have developed an algorithm to determine the most efficient routes for snow ploughs and gritters. Snow plough routing has always been something of a ‘black art’: to direct a fleet of show plough to clear priority roads without having the same road cleared several times while others are left untreated. Increasingly, GPS is being used to track the routes the clearing vehicles have taken but until now it has not been possible to ta
  • November 7, 2024
    Electronic toll collection: Change is in the air
    Trends in technology plus users’ comfort in adopting new advances indicate that the environment for a new electronic toll collection architecture is evolving. Hal Worrall considers what this might look like