A scalable framework for correcting public transport timetables using real-time data for accessibility analysis
This provides a more realistic evidence base for transport planning and service evaluation, addressing a domain-specific issue for public transport accessibility analysis.
The study tackled the problem of inaccurate public transport accessibility analyses due to reliance on static timetables by developing a scalable framework to reconstruct empirical bus timetables from real-time vehicle location data, enabling national-scale analysis of travel time variability.
Travel time is a fundamental component of accessibility measurement, yet most accessibility analyses rely on static timetable data that assume public transport services operate exactly as scheduled. Such representations overlook the substantial variability in travel times arising from operational conditions and service disruptions. In this study, we develop a scalable framework for reconstructing empirical bus timetables from high-frequency vehicle location data. Using national-scale real-time feeds from the UK Bus Open Data Service (BODS), we implement an automated data collection pipeline that continuously archives vehicle positions and daily timetable data. Observed vehicle locations are then matched to scheduled routes to infer stop-level arrival and departure times, enabling the construction of corrected empirical timetables. The resulting dataset allows travel time variability (TTV) to be analysed at fine temporal resolution and across large geographic areas. The computational efficiency and scalability of the framework enable national-scale accessibility analyses that incorporate observed service performance, providing a more realistic evidence base for evaluating public transport services and supporting transport planning.