Traffic Impact Assessment of Land Use Proposals: Fifty Years of Australian Experience
Publish Year: 1398
Type: Journal paper
Language: English
View: 521
This Paper With 14 Page And PDF Format Ready To Download
- Certificate
- I'm the author of the paper
Export:
Document National Code:
JR_IJTE-6-4_006
Index date: 9 June 2019
Traffic Impact Assessment of Land Use Proposals: Fifty Years of Australian Experience abstract
A Traffic Impact Assessment (TIA) provides information on the projected traffic expected from a proposed development. A TIA also evaluates the impact of proposed development on the roadways in the immediate proximity of the proposed development. The TIA should identify potential traffic operational problems or concerns and recommend appropriate actions to reduce impacts. Draft traffic impact assessment (TIA) guidelines for various land uses in general, and for high traffic generating buildings in particular, were proposed in Iran in the middle of 2016. In formulating that report the Traffic Committee of the Iranian Building Engineering Order reviewed international experience, including that of Australia. Traffic impact assessment started in Australia in the 1960s when the traffic police exercised much authority in trying to prevent land-use developments from taking place abutting main roads. Concepts derived from queuing theory where the application of the mean service time to establish maximum traffic generation rates for a proposed development was introduced. Attached to that theory was the absorption capacity of a priority traffic stream. This latter one found its way into traffic engineering practice to provide a rational basis for assessing development applications. As experience accumulated the guidelines became refined and a second edition of Austroads’ traffic impact assessment was released in 2016. This paper presents the documentation which is expected from a developer, traffic models available to the consultants working for the developer, and importance of developer contributions require by the developer for changes to the surrounding transport network. To illustrate the process, a simple case study of a school expansion is provided. The steps taken to show the impact of an increase from 185 to 600 pupils in Sydney is illustrated. The process include traffic data collection on the surrounding streets to forecasting future traffic using appropriate models and community workshops. In the light of a practical case, the process then ends with proposing options to mitigate adverse traffic impacts of the development application. The overall work illustrates the principles of TIA and to point to the onus on all developers to manage travel demands to achieve more sustainable outcomes from urban development.
Traffic Impact Assessment of Land Use Proposals: Fifty Years of Australian Experience Keywords:
Traffic Impact Assessment of Land Use Proposals: Fifty Years of Australian Experience authors
Gholam Reza Shiran
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Transport, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, Iran
John Black
Emeritus Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Sydney, Australia
Kam Tara
Director, Urban Research and Planning (URaP), International, North Strathfield, NSW, Australia
مراجع و منابع این Paper:
لیست زیر مراجع و منابع استفاده شده در این Paper را نمایش می دهد. این مراجع به صورت کاملا ماشینی و بر اساس هوش مصنوعی استخراج شده اند و لذا ممکن است دارای اشکالاتی باشند که به مرور زمان دقت استخراج این محتوا افزایش می یابد. مراجعی که مقالات مربوط به آنها در سیویلیکا نمایه شده و پیدا شده اند، به خود Paper لینک شده اند :