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Book launch: Transport Planning … Transport Engineering

books transport planning
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Elements of Access:
Transport Planning for Engineers, Transport Engineering for Planners

By David M. Levinson, Wes Marshall, Kay Axhausen*
336 pages, 164 color images. Published by the Network Design Lab, 2017
ISBN: Softcover:   9781389067617  | Hardcover: 9781389067402

PDF (Electronic Download) (on Gumroad)… $8.88
High Quality Color Trade Paperback (on Blurb)… $28.88
High Quality Color Trade Paperback (on Amazon)… $42.88
Very High Quality Color Hardcover (on Blurb) … $88.88

Order links: transportist.org


Nothing in cities makes sense except in the light of accessibility

Transport cannot be understood without reference to the location of activities (land use), and vice versa. To understand one requires understanding the other. However, for a variety of historical reasons, transport and land use are quite divorced in practice. Typical transport engineers only touch land use planning courses once at most, and only then if they attend graduate school. Land use planners understand transport the way everyone does, from the perspective of the traveler, not of the system, and are seldom exposed to transport aside from, at best, a lone course in graduate school. This text aims to bridge the chasm, helping engineers understand the elements of access that are associated not only with traffic, but also with human behavior and activity location, and helping planners understand the technology underlying transport engineering, the processes, equations, and logic that make up the transport half of the accessibility measure. It aims to help both communicate accessibility to the public.

I Introduction
1 Elemental Accessibility

1.1 Isochrone
1.2 Rings of Opportunity
1.3 Metropolitan Average Accessibility

II The People

2 Modeling People

2.1 Stages, Trips, Journeys, and Tours
2.2 The Daily Schedule
2.3 Coordination
2.4 Diurnal Curve
2.5 Travel Time
2.6 Travel Time Distribution
2.7 Social Interactions
2.8 Activity Space
2.9 Space-time Prism
2.10 Choice
2.11 Principle of Least Effort
2.12 Capability
2.13 Observation Paradox
2.14 Capacity is Relative
2.15 Time Perception
2.16 Time, Space, & Happiness
2.17 Risk Compensation

III The Places

3 The Transect

3.1 Residential Density
3.2 Urban Population Densities
3.3 Pedestrian City
3.4 Neighborhood Unit
3.5 Bicycle City
3.6 Bicycle Networks
3.7 Transit City
3.8 Walkshed
3.9 Automobile City

4 Markets and Networks

4.1 Serendipity and Interaction
4.2 The Value of Interaction
4.3 Firm-Firm Interactions
4.4 Labor Markets and Labor Networks
4.5 Wasteful Commute
4.6 Job/Worker Balance
4.7 Spatial Mismatch

IV The Plexus

5 Queueing

5.1 Deterministic Queues
5.2 Stochastic Queues
5.3 Platooning
5.4 Incidents
5.5 Just-in-time

6 Traffic

6.1 Flow
6.2 Flow Maps
6.3 Flux
6.4 Traffic Density
6.5 Level of Service
6.6 Speed
6.7 Shockwaves
6.8 Ramp Metering
6.9 Highway Capacity
6.10 High-Occupancy
6.11 Snow Business
6.12 Macroscopic Fundamental Diagram
6.13 Metropolitan Fundamental Diagram

7 Streets and Highways

7.1 Highways
7.2 Boulevards
7.3 Street Furniture
7.4 Signs, Signals, and Markings
7.5 Junctions
7.6 Conflicts
7.7 Conflict Points
7.8 Roundabouts
7.9 Complete Streets
7.10 Dedicated Spaces
7.11 Shared Space
7.12 Spontaneous Priority
7.13 Directionality
7.14 Lanes
7.15 Vertical Separations
7.16 Parking Capacity

8 Modalities

8.1 Mode Shares
8.2 First and Last Mile
8.3 Park-and-Ride
8.4 Line-haul
8.5 Timetables
8.6 Bus Bunching
8.7 Fares
8.8 Transit Capacity
8.9 Modal Magnitudes

9 Routing

9.1 Conservation
9.2 Equilibrium
9.3 Reliability
9.4 Price of Anarchy
9.5 The Braess Paradox
9.6 Rationing
9.7 Pricing

10 Network Topology

10.1 Graph
10.2 Hierarchy
10.3 Degree
10.4 Betweenness
10.5 Clustering
10.6 Meshedness
10.7 Treeness
10.8 Resilience
10.9 Circuity

11 Geometries

11.1 Grid
11.2 BlockSizes
11.3 Hex
11.4 Ring-Radial

V The Production

12 Supply and Demand

12.1 Induced Demand
12.2 Induced Supply & Value Capture
12.3 Cost Perception
12.4 Externalities
12.5 Lifecycle Costing
12.6 Affordability

13 Synergies

13.1 Economies of Scale
13.2 Containerization
13.3 Economies of Scope
13.4 Network Economies
13.5 Intertechnology Effects
13.6 Economies of Agglomeration
13.7 Economies of Amenity

VI The Progress

14 Lifecycle Dynamics

14.1 Technology Substitutes for Proximity
14.2 Conurbation
14.3 Megaregions
14.4 Path Dependence
14.5 Urban Scaffolding
14.6 Modularity
14.7 Network Origami
14.8 Volatility Begets Stability

15 Our Autonomous Future

Bibliography


*   David M. Levinson is a Professor at the University of Sidney; Wes Marshall  is a Professor at the University of Colorado, Denver; Kay Axhausen is a Professor at ETH Zürich