Transportation-land-use interaction: empirical findings in North America, and their implications for modeling.

Author(s)
Badoe, D.A. & Miller, E.J.
Year
Abstract

The last two decades have witnessed the implementation of various policies based on land-use to address problems stemming from automobile ownership and use. There are, however, questions with respect to the efficacy of such policies. This paper therefore reviews the literature on empirical studies of the transport-land-use interaction with the objective of identifying the current state of knowledge concerning the interactions, particularly with respect to the impact land-use policies are likely to have on the system. The focus is on studies conducted in North America. The results are mixed; some studies conclude that urban densities, traditional neighborhood design schemes, and land-use mix have an impact on auto ownership and use. Other studies find the impact of such variables to be at best marginal. Gaps in our understanding of the interaction are identified. These are found to be primarily the result of data limitations and methodological weaknesses. A detailed discussion of the implications of the findings for the development and application of integrated transportation-land-use models is provided, with the recommendation that without such an integrated approach to analyzing the transportation-land-use interaction, any study of impacts of urban form on travel behavior is likely to yield erroneous results. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E104798 /72 / ITRD E104798
Source

Transportation Research Part D. 2000 /07. 5d(4) Pp235-63 (55 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.