This paper considers a generalization of the network design problem for
On-Demand Multimodal Transit Systems (ODMTS). An ODMTS consists of a selection
of hubs served by high frequency buses, and passengers are connected to the
hubs by on-demand shuttles which serve the first and last miles. This paper
generalizes prior work by including three additional elements that are critical
in practice. First, different frequencies are allowed throughout the network.
Second, additional modes of transit (e.g., rail) are included. Third, a limit
on the number of transfers per passenger is introduced. Adding a constraint to
limit the number of transfers has a significant negative impact on existing
Benders decomposition approaches as it introduces non-convexity in the
subproblem. Instead, this paper enforces the limit through transfer-expanded
graphs, i.e., layered graphs in which each layer corresponds to a certain
number of transfers. A real-world case study is presented for which the
generalized ODMTS design problem is solved for the city of Atlanta. The results
demonstrate that exploiting the problem structure through transfer-expanded
graphs results in significant computational improvements.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure