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Land Use and Transportation Models

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Title: Land Use and Transportation Models


1
Land Use and Transportation Models
  • G111/211a
  • Draft Notes

2
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

3
CAAA ISTEA - TEA-21
LAND USE
INTEGRATED MODELS AN ACCOUNT FOR TWO WAY
RELATIONSHIPS
AIR QUALITY
TRANSPORTATION
4
It is a different and changing policy world
European Union, Japan, Canada, Australia, and USA
  • Mobility vs Accessibility

5
Mobility vs accessibility policies (Kennedy et
al, 2005)
6
  • Policy Coordination with Packages of Policy
    Actions in the EU
  • Effective Governance
  • Integration of Policies
  • New Needs for Policy Action Assessments
  • More Informative Models

7
Transportation and Land Use
  • Land Development --gt Location Choices
  • Location Choices --gt Activities
  • Location Choices -? Car Ownership
  • Activities -gt Travel
  • Travel -gt Flows
  • Flows -gt Activity Patterns
  • Use Spatial Distribution
  • AND MANY MORE
  • See next

8
Example Mobility as Transit Mobility
  • Use land use to increase transit use (TCRP study)

9
Seven Groups of Factors (12/7)
  • 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!

10
Seven Groups of Factors (34/7)
  • 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)

11
Seven Groups of Factors (56/7)
  • Socioeconomics
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Income
  • Employment/Occupation
  • Social Role
  • Workplace/Employment Density
  • Bring the CBD back!
  • High density suburban centers
  • Campus examples
  • Parking?

12
The Seventh Factor
  • Accessibility
  • Connectivity
  • Amount of activities
  • Closeness

13
These factors are not acting alone mediation!
14
Wegeners simplified cycle
15
Wegeners LU/T Feedback Cycle
16
Lagged Relationships
17
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 -gt optimal space and
    location for activities
  • Time-budgets -gt time geography -gt activity-based
    approaches
  • NEXT??????

18
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/
19
The Isolated State von Thünen, 1826
See also http//www.csiss.org/classics/content/9
20
Lessons Learned
  • Land Rent
  • Distance Decay

21
Central Places Christaller, 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/classi
cs/content/67
22
Bid-Rent Theory Alonso, 1964
23
Example Bid rent theories
Diamond sales in the CBD and agriculture in the
periphery residences obey a somewhat different
law/rule
24
Retail Location Huff, 1964
Huff Retail Location Model competitive with
explicit macro-rules see also http//www.belkcoll
ege.uncc.edu/mjkhouja/Locate8.ppt261,10,Single
Facility Location Using Cross Median Approach
25
Household Location Park Burgess, 1925
An evolutionary approach to urban ecology
http//www.csiss.org/classics/content/26
26
Burgess Model
27
Isards Hybrid Model
Note the Corridors of development
28
Action Spaces Hägerstrand, 1970
29
The Brotchie Triangle
30
Interaction travel time Dispersion employment
distance from City centre
31
Theoretical Expectations About Relationships
32
From Land Use to Transportation
33
From Land Use to Transportation
34
From Land Use to Transportation
35
From Land Use to Transportation
36
Better Transportation -gt Better Accessibility
  • What happens to land use?

37
From Transportation to Land Use via Accessibility
38
From Transportation to Land Use via Accessibility
39
From Transportation to Transportation
40
From Transportation to Transportation
41
From Transportation to Transportation
42
(No Transcript)
43
Ideal Designs
  • Monocentric Compact City
  • Polycentric Pockets of Paradise
  • Dispersed Development People Driven

44
(No Transcript)
45
Empirical (Data analysis) Studies
  • General findings

46
From Land Use to Transport
47
From Land Use to Transport
48
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?

49
From Transportation to Land Use
50
From Transportation to Transportation
51
MODELS
  • Many different time and space resolutions and
    assumptions about behavior

52
What we need
See Meyer and Miller chapter 6 And Miller in KG
book
53
The Miller model policies and models
54
Models in Practice
55
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

56
The Models Developed
57
Waddells Taxonomy
58
(No Transcript)
59
Operational and Under Development Land Use Models
60
From TRB workshop by Miller based on Knight and
Trygg 1977
61
http//ntl.bts.gov/DOCS/ornl.html
62
Dynamics/Lags
63
Integration for what?
Meplan source Hunt/Miller TRB workshop
64
Idealized Model System (TCRP H-12)
65
Design Modeling
66
Beyond todays LU/Trans
67
Websites
  • www.acs.ucalgary.ca/jabraham/ MEPLAN_and_Urban_Ec
    onomics.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/I
    LUTE-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

68
What else can we change by design?
  • Next Models in Practice PROPOLIS Examples
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