A controversial approach for the quantitative appraisal of environmental benefits in highway assessment.

Author(s)
North, B.H.
Year
Abstract

The paper explains the inadequacy of the current United Kingdom's Department of Transport cost-benefit analysis methods in the assessment of benefits to the Community, and also the inadequacy of their environmental assessment method which is purely qualitative. It shows that the lack of a quantitative method of assessment results in worthy schemes being rejected. To recognise the Government policy to remove traffic from towns and villages, the need is established for a quantitative method of assessment of environmental benefits to the Community. The theory is expressed, based on obvious evidence, that benefits do accrue from the building of motorways and bypasses, such as enhanced land and property values. Research and discussions over a period of years are related which indicate ways of confirming that these benefits exist and of quantifying them with sufficient accuracy to enable them to be used in the cost-benefit analysis which will then more accurately reflect the worth of schemes, both to travellers and communities. Ways and means will be suggested of using this same analysis to recoup some of the expenditure on highways from those who directly benefit.

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Publication

Library number
C 697 (In: C 685 [electronic version only]) /10 /21 / IRRD 842415
Source

In: Highway appraisal and design : proceedings of seminar E (P307) held at the 16th PTRC European Transport and Planning Summer Annual Meeting, University of Bath, England, September 12-16, 1988, p. 153-160

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.