Accessibility appraisal of land-use/transport policy strategies: More than just adding up travel-time savings

Karst Geurs*, Barry Zondag, Gerard de Jong, M.A. de Bok

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

We examine the accessibility benefits associated with some land-use policy strategies for the Netherlands that anticipate on expected climate change. A disaggregate logsum accessibility measure using the Dutch national land-use/transport interaction model TIGRIS XL is used to compute changes in consumer surplus. The measure provides an elegant and convenient solution to measure the full accessibility benefits from land-use and/or transport policies, when discrete choice travel-demand models are available that already produce
logsums. It accounts for both changes in generalised transport costs and changes in destination utility, and is thus capable of providing the accessibility benefits from changes in the distribution of activities, due to transport or land-use policies. The case study shows that logsum accessibility benefits from land-use policy strategies can be quite large compared to investment programmes for road and public transport infrastructure, largely due to changes in trip production and destination utility, which are not measured in the standard rule-of-half benefit measure.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)382-393
Number of pages12
JournalTransportation Research. Part D: Transport & Environment
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Logsum accessibility benefits
  • Land-use policies
  • Travel-time savings

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