Land Use and Transportation Models G111/211a Draft Notes.

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Land Use and Transportation Models G111/211a Draft Notes
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Transcript of Land Use and Transportation Models G111/211a Draft Notes.

Page 1: Land Use and Transportation Models G111/211a Draft Notes.

Land Use and Transportation Models

G111/211a

Draft Notes

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New era

Policies aim at more complex processes Sustainability is becoming increasingly more

popular – possibly accepted practice(?!) Cause and effects between transportation

and land use are not one-way linear sequences

Short, medium, and long term relationships can now be modeled using somewhat sophisticated tools and fast computers

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CAAA – ISTEA - TEA-21

LAND USE

AIR QUALITYTRANSPORTATION

INTEGRATED MODELS = AN

ACCOUNT

FOR

TWO WAY RELATIONSHIPS

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It is a different and changing policy world – European

Union, Japan, Canada, Australia, and USA

Mobility vs Accessibility

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Mobility vs accessibility policies (Kennedy et al, 2005)

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-Policy Coordination with Packages of Policy Actions in the EU

-Effective Governance =

Integration of Policies =

New Needs for Policy Action Assessments =

More Informative Models

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Transportation and Land Use

Land Development --> Location Choices Location Choices --> Activities Location Choices - Car Ownership Activities -> Travel Travel -> Flows Flows -> Activity Patterns Use Spatial Distribution AND MANY MORE See next

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Example: Mobility as Transit Mobility

Use land use to increase transit use (TCRP study)

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Seven Groups of Factors (1&2/7)

Increase Residential Density Activity locations closer

to each other Transit service more

economical Other factors need to be

considered

Neighborhood Design

Mixed land use Transit friendly designs

(think of turning radius) Mode separation Size!

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Seven Groups of Factors (3&4/7)

Transit Supply Situational barriers System & Service

(availability, frequency, timing/flexibility)

Knowledge/information Negative predisposition Cost/time/comfort

Car Ownership Number of cars Types of cars Specialization = more

use? Costs (perceived and

real)

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Seven Groups of Factors (5&6/7)

Socioeconomics Age Gender Income Employment/Occupation Social Role

Workplace/Employment Density Bring the CBD back! High density suburban

centers Campus examples Parking?

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The Seventh Factor

Accessibility Connectivity Amount of activities Closeness

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These factors are not acting alone –

mediation!

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Wegener’s simplified cycle

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Wegener’s LU/T Feedback Cycle

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Lagged Relationships

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Theories

Spatial Interaction (Distance decay functions) Urban Land Markets (Bid rent) Waves Theories – Urban Life Cycles (Rise and Fall) Social Ecology (Clusters and specialized centers) Action-space analyses -> optimal space and

location for activities Time-budgets -> time geography -> activity-based

approaches NEXT??????

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The Von Thunen Model of Market, Production, and Distance R = Y(p-c) – Yfm

R = Rent per unit of land. Y = Yield per unit of land. p = market price per unit of yield. c = Average production costs per unit of yield. m = Distance from market (in kilometers or miles). f = Freight rate per unit of yield and unit of distance.

Assumptions: Isolation. There is one isolated market in an isolated state having no interactions

(trade) with the outside. Ubiquitous land characteristics. The land surrounding the market in entirely flat and

its fertility uniform. Transportation. It is assumed there are no transport infrastructures such as roads or

rivers and that farmers are transporting their production to the market using horses and carts. Transportation costs are dependent of the type of commodity being transported to the market as well as the distance involved.

http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/

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The Isolated Statevon Thünen, 1826

See also: http://www.csiss.org/classics/content/9

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Lessons Learned

Land Rent: Distance Decay

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Central PlacesChristaller, 1933

A Central Place is a settlement or a nodal point that serves the area around with goods and services (Mayhew, 1997). Christaller's model also was based on the premise that all goods and services were purchased by consumers from the nearest central place, that the demands placed on all central places in the plain were similar, and that none of the central places made any excessive profit. See http://www.csiss.org/classics/content/67

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Bid-Rent TheoryAlonso, 1964

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Example: Bid rent theories

Diamond sales in the CBD and agriculture in the periphery – residences obey a somewhat different law/rule

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Retail LocationHuff, 1964

Huff Retail Location Model – competitive with explicit macro-rules: see also http://www.belkcollege.uncc.edu/mjkhouja/Locate8.ppt#261,10,Single Facility Location Using Cross Median Approach

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Household LocationPark & Burgess, 1925

An evolutionary approach to urban ecology: http://www.csiss.org/classics/content/26

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Burgess Model

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Isard’s Hybrid Model

Note the Corridors of development

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Action SpacesHägerstrand, 1970

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The Brotchie Triangle

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Interaction = travel time

Dispersion = employment distance from City centre

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Theoretical Expectations About

Relationships

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From Land Use to Transportation

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From Land Use to Transportation

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From Land Use to Transportation

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From Land Use to Transportation

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Better Transportation -> Better Accessibility

What happens to land use?

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From Transportation to Land Use via Accessibility

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From Transportation to Land Use via Accessibility

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From Transportation to Transportation

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From Transportation to Transportation

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From Transportation to Transportation

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Ideal Designs

Monocentric – Compact City

Polycentric – Pockets of Paradise

Dispersed Development – People Driven

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Empirical (Data analysis) Studies

General findings

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From Land Use to Transport

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From Land Use to Transport

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Be Aware of Selectivity Issues

People that select city centers different than people in suburbs

People that select to live in large cities different than small town dwellers

Large portions of decision making spheres largely neglected – school choice, effect of family and friends, family endowments, what else?

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From Transportation to Land Use

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From Transportation to Transportation

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MODELS

Many – different time and space resolutions and assumptions

about behavior

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What we need

See Meyer and Miller chapter 6 And Miller in KG book

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The Miller model – policies and models

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Models in Practice

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Three Main ways to Quantify Land Use Transport Interactions

Hypothetically change land use and ask people what they will do differently Advantages and disadvantages

Create experiments were we actually change land use and observe people behavior Advantages and disadvantages

Build computer simulators with models that show these interactions and behavioral changes Advantages and disadvantages

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The Models Developed

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Waddell’s Taxonomy

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Operational and Under Development Land Use Models

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From TRB workshop by Miller – based on Knight and Trygg 1977

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http://ntl.bts.gov/DOCS/ornl.html

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Dynamics/Lags

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Integration for what?

Meplan – source Hunt/Miller TRB workshop

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Idealized Model System (TCRP H-12)

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Design & Modeling

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Beyond todays LU/Trans

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Websites www.acs.ucalgary.ca/~jabraham/ MEPLAN_and_Urban_Economics.PDF http://www.urbansim.org/ http://www.modelistica.com/tranus_english.htm http://www.mussa.cl/E_index.html http://www.civil.engineering.utoronto.ca/English/ILUTE-Research.html http://www.geosimulation.org/geosim/lutms.htm http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/TD/TP/Modeling.shtml http://ntl.bts.gov/DOCS/ornl.html

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What else can we change by design?

Next Models in Practice & PROPOLIS Examples