Accessibility evaluation of land use and transport strategies (Geurs, van Wee) Flashcards
Definition of accessibility (accessbility measures)
The role of land-use and transport systems in enabling individuals or groups to participate in activities at different locations.
Definition accessibility (passenger transport)
The extent to which land-use and transport systems allow individuals or groups to reach activities or destinations using various transport modes
Four key components of accessibility
- land use; supply and demand of opportunities and competition
- Transportation: transport system (time, costs, effort)
- Temporal: availability at different times of day, time available for people to participate
- Individual: need, abilities, opportunities of people (incl. age, income, education)
Four perspectives on measuring accessibility
- Infrastructure based: performance or service level of infrastructure (congestion, speed)
- Location-based: accessibility at locations and level of acc. in spatially distributed activities
- person based: individual level, focus on limitations on persons freedom of action
- utility based: economic benefits individuals derive from acc.
criteria for accessibility measures
Theoretical basis, operationalization, interpretability and communicability, accessibility as a social indicator, accessibility as an economic indicator
Infrastructure based accessibility measures
Focus on factors like, travel times, congestion and road network operating speed.
shortcomings of infrastructure based acc. measures
- overlook potential land-use effects of transportation strategies
- do not accurately measure the accessibility impacts if land use strategies that influence the spatial distribution
Location-based accessibility measures
- distance measures: evaluate the degree of connectivity between two locations, using straight line distance.
- Contour measures: count the number of opportunities within a specified travel time, distance or costs
- potential measures: estimate the accessibility of opportunities in one area to all other areas
- Balancing factors: aim to incorporate competition effects in accessibility measures
Person-based accessibility measures
focus on analyzing accessibility from an individual’s perspective, considering spatial and temporal constraints.
Utility-based accessibility measures + benefits and disadvantages
View accessibility as the result of transportation choices and are based on utility theory (choice between two options that satisfy same needs)
1. logsum benefit measure: based on random utility theory and used denominator of multinominal logit model
2. Balancing factor benefit measure: based on doubly constrained entropy model. provides accessibility measures that represent expected benefits, attracted tris, and trips between zones
benefits: can assess, transport-user benetifs of both land-use and transport projects. can account for non-linear relationship between acc. improvements and user-benefit changes
disadvantage: complexity of interpretation and communication. Do not fully satisfy temporal constraints.
Logsum benefit measure formula
- A_i = ln Σe^(V_k)
- A_i = -1/k * ln Σe^(V_k)
A_i represents the maximum expected utility, and V_k represents the temporal and spatial components of utility.
Balancing factor benefit measure formula
- A_i = -1/b * ln(a_i)
- A_j = -1/b * ln(b_j)
- A_ij = -1/b * ln(a_i * b_j)