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Modelling long-term impacts of the transport supply system on land use and travel demand in urban areas

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  • Musolino, Giuseppe

Abstract

It is commonly accepted that there is a two-way relationship between land use and transport in urban areas. Land use affects transport, conditioning travel demand. Conversely, transport affects land use, conditioning spatial distribution of activities and land market. The problem of simulating mutual interactions between land use and transport has been tackled by so-called Land Use Transport Interaction (LUTI) models. Different modelling approaches are present in literature, which are generally grouped into three main categories: spatial micro-economic, spatial interaction and spatial accounting models. The paper presents a spatial accounting LUTI model, which relies on Multi-Regional-Input-Output (MRIO) framework. The model has two main interacting components: an activity model and a transport model, which allow to endogenously estimating activities generation and location, land prices, travel demand and transport accessibility. The proposed LUTI model has been specified and applied in an urban area, more particularly to the town of Reggio Calabria (Italy). The objective of the application is the estimation of long-term impacts on land use and passenger travel demand patterns when interventions on transport facilities and services are planned at a strategic scale. The results confirm that MRIO framework offers the potentialities to bring activity location, land use in line within travel demand modelling.

Suggested Citation

  • Musolino, Giuseppe, 2008. "Modelling long-term impacts of the transport supply system on land use and travel demand in urban areas," European Transport \ Trasporti Europei, ISTIEE, Institute for the Study of Transport within the European Economic Integration, issue 40, pages 69-87.
  • Handle: RePEc:sot:journl:y:2008:i:40:p:69-87
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10077/6006
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Lowdon Wingo & Harvey S. Perloff, 1961. "The Washington Transportation Plan: Technics Or Politics?," Papers in Regional Science, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 7(1), pages 249-262, January.
    2. Alex Anas & Yu Liu, 2007. "A Regional Economy, Land Use, And Transportation Model (Relu‐Tran©): Formulation, Algorithm Design, And Testing," Journal of Regional Science, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 47(3), pages 415-455, August.
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    Cited by:

    1. Hiroe Ando & Fumitaka Kurauchi, 2021. "How Does Travel Demand Follow the Change in Infrastructure? Multiple-Year Eigenvector Centrality Analysis," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 13(23), pages 1-18, December.

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