Railway Project Planning
Railway Project Planning
Railway Project Planning
Learning
Objectives
➢ Network Planning
➢ Line Planning
The Railway Planning Process
Strategic Level
➢ Network Planning
Central to the network planning phase of
this planning level are problems which
concern the construction, and/or
modification of existing infrastructure.
The Railway Planning Process
Strategic Level
➢ Line Planning
A line in a railway network refers to a route
that starts and ends at a terminal station,
connects several intermediate stations, and is
operated by a particular train type. The
frequency of a given line is the number of
trains serving it over a certain time period.
The Railway Planning Process
Tactical Level - problems focus more on
allocating resources over an infrastructure
that is assumed to be fixed.
➢ Timetable Generation
➢ Rolling Stock Schedules
➢ Crew Schedules
The Railway Planning Process
Tactical Level
➢ Timetable Generation
The problem of determining the arrival and
departure times for a set of trains at a
sequence of stations is commonly referred to
as the train timetabling problem. Depending
on the nature of the underlying network, this
problem does present itself in several different
forms.
The Railway Planning Process
Tactical Level
➢ Timetable Generation
The problem is termed the train pathing problem, or
the train scheduling problem, and not without
confusion, the train dispatching problem. In such
problems a routing of the trains is equated with a
feasible so-called meet/pass plan in which trains are
scheduled to stop at stations to allow trains to share
the infrastructure or even overtake one another.
The Railway Planning Process
Tactical Level
➢ Crew Schedules
The journey of the trains, also of the empty trains
or equipment between stations, are split into
sequences of trips. A trip is a segment of a train
journey that must be serviced by the same crew,
without rest periods. The problem of crew
scheduling deals with the construction of duties
from a given collection of trips.
The Railway Planning Process
Operational Level - problems are defined to
be those that occur on a day-to-day basis
when operating policies determined at the
tactical level need to be adjusted due to
unforeseen disturbances.
The process of
putting a decision
or plan into effect;
execution.
What is an
Implementation
Plan?
The implementation plan
facilitates the execution
of a plan, idea, model,
design, specification,
standard, algorithm, or
policy by presenting
clear implementation
steps that need to follow.
Thus, an implementation
plan is the documented
steps you need to take to
successfully achieve your
implementation pursuits.
Guidelines to Ensure
Planning and
Implementation
➢ Involve the Right People in
the Planning Process.
➢ Write down the Planning
Information and
Communicate it Widely.
➢ Goals and Objectives
should be SMARTER.
SMARTER
✓ Specific
✓ Measurable
✓ Acceptable
✓ Realistic
✓ Time frame
✓ Extending
✓ Rewarding
Guidelines to Ensure
Planning and
Implementation
➢ Build in Accountability
(Regularly Review Who’s
Doing What and By When?)
➢ Note Deviations from the
Plan and Replan
Accordingly.
➢ Evaluate Planning Process
and the Plan.
Guidelines to Ensure
Planning and
Implementation
➢ Recurring Planning Process
is at Least as Important as
Plan Document.
➢ Nature of the Process
Should Be Compatible to
Nature of Planners
➢ Critical -- But Frequently
Missing Step --
Acknowledgement and
Celebration of Results.
END OF PRESENTATION