Generated traffic and induced travel. Implications for transport planning.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

item.page.orlis-pc

Ca

item.page.orlis-pl

Victoria

item.page.language

item.page.issn

item.page.zdb

item.page.orlis-av

item.page.type

item.page.type-orlis

EDOC

relationships.isAuthorOf

Abstract

Traffic congestion tends to maintain equilibrium. Congestion reaches a point at which it constrains further growth in peak-period trips. If road capacity increases, the number of peak-period trips also increases until congestion again limits further traffic growth. The additional travel is called generated traffic. Generated traffic consists of diverted traffic (trips shifted in time, route and destination), and induced vehicle travel (shifts from other modes, longer trips and new vehicle trips). Research indicates that generated traffic often fills a significant portion of capacity added to congested urban road. Generated traffic has three implications for transport planning. First, it reduces the congestion reduction benefits of road capacity expansion. Second, it increases many external costs. Third, it provides relatively small user benefits because it consists of vehicle travel that consumers are most willing to forego when their costs increase. It is important to account for these factors in analysis. This paper defines types of generated traffic, discusses generated traffic impacts, recommends ways to incorporate generated traffic into evaluation, and describes alternatives to roadway capacity expansion.

Description

Keywords

Journal

item.page.issue

item.page.dc-source

item.page.pageinfo

38 S.

Citation

item.page.dc-subject

item.page.dc-relation-ispartofseries