Urban transportation : paradoxes for the 1980's

Author(s)
Hall, P.
Year
Abstract

Urban transport planning in advanced industrial countries faces a set of paradoxes. Since the late 1960s the emphasis has shifted from urban highway building to car restraint and public transport priority. The recent approach to transport planning stresses policies to meet the demands of individual household members constrained by time and space. This approach might in turn suggest fairly radical solutions to the problem of personal mobility, no longer based on the conventional public transport wisdom.

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Publication

Library number
B 23126 (In: B 23120 [electronic version only]) /72/ IRRD 276527
Source

In: Colloquium Vervoersplanologisch Speurwerk CVS 1983 : transportation and stagnation : challenges for planning and research : proceedings of the 10th International Colloquium, Zandvoort, The Netherlands, December 14-16, 1983, Volume 1, p. 87-95.

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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.