Variables or attributes used to measure the impact of land use on traffic
Density
•Site intensity
•Gross population,
•household density
•Net household density
•Employment density Retail
•service employment density
Mix of uses
•Percent floor space in office,
•retail use Ratio of on-site employees to housing units within 3 miles
•Entropy variables (land use balance)
•Dissimilarity variables (land use mix)
•Buildings with mixed office and retail vs. buildings with only office
•Retail, residences, offices within ¼ mile
•Convenience services within ¼ mile
•Number of land use changes along a route
•Fraction of population within ¼ mile of neighborhood shopping
•Employment density of residential zones
•Commercial or other non-residential buildings within 300 ft of residence
•Proportion of commercial parcels with vertical mixed use
•Proportion of residential units within ¼ mile of convenience retail
•Distance to nearest grocery store, gas station, park Retail, office, dominance
Connectivity of networks
•Access to regional centers, commercial employment within a zone
•Employment accessible within 30 min. By car, transit
•Proportion of commercial jobs within ¼ mile of bus stop or within zone
•Distance to CBD, activity center(s)
•Presence of continuous sidewalks or pedestrian paths
•Density of census block
•Proportion of residential areas with gridded streets
•Road density per household , Road network by type
•Number of street intersections, dead-end streets
•Gridded street patterns; Discontinuous street pattern
•Proportion of four-way intersections
Parking supply and availability
•Parking supply
•Number of parking spaces per employee
•Proportion of commercial parcels with paid off-street or abutting on-street parking
Pedestrian environment
•Number of residents, employees within ¼ mile of bus stop
•Various variables measuring urban design characteristics (Cervero and Kochleman 1996)
•Presence of sidewalks or pedestrian paths
•Proportion of street frontage with sidewalks; without buildings; or with trees; of blocks with sidewalks
•Number of signalized crosswalks, striped crosswalks
•Sidewalk width; Width of widest sidewalk
•Number of sidewalk benches
•Presence of bike paths; Length of arterials
•Distance between overhead street lights
• Absence of vacant lots, graffiti
There are several variables or attributes used to measure the impact of land use on traffic. These include:
By measuring and analyzing these variables, planners and traffic engineers can better understand the impact of land use on traffic and develop strategies to mitigate any negative impacts. For example, they may recommend the development of public transportation facilities, the implementation of transportation demand management strategies, or the construction of new transportation infrastructure to accommodate increased traffic volumes.
Land use and Transport Planning home page
Land use and Transport Planning.pdf
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