Relationships between urban planning variables and traffic crashes in Damascus.

Author(s)
Al-Masaeid, H.R. & Suleiman, G.
Year
Abstract

This study investigated the relationships between city planning and street network variables and traffic accidents at the zone level. Damascus, the capital of Syria, which consists of fourteen urban zones, was selected as a case study. For each zone, cross-sectional data on traffic accidents, vehicle-kilometres of travel (VKT), population, zone area, land -use developments, and street network variables were collected. Multivariate regression analyses were conducted to develop mathematical relationships that could have practical applications for use by city planners and traffic safety engineers. The results indicated that VKT, population density, percentage of open space, percentage of commercial frontages, distribution of public buildings, street network length, and intersection density were significantly related to the number of accidents in each urban zone. Indicators for estimating urban zone accidents were also derived, to remind city planners and traffic safety engineers of the potential impacts of some planning variables and urban characteristics on traffic safety in urban areas. (a).

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Publication

Library number
I E211884 /21 /72 /82 / ITRD E211884
Source

Road And Transport Research. 2004 /12. 13(4) Pp63-73 (20 Refs.)

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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.