Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1059495 Journal of Transport Geography 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper sets out a demand modelling framework for the development of a regional transport and land use model system (R-Tresis), to be implemented for New South Wales (Australia). Traditionally, the focus of such a model system has been major metropolitan areas such as Sydney, where we have developed Tresis (Hensher, 2002). Given the growing concern about regional accessibility to many service classes, there is a need for a modelling capability that can be used to prioritize and guide policy decisions in regions that are often described as remote, rural, low density and small town. In developing a framework that is capable of integrating both demand and supply elements of transportation and land use activity, we recognized the challenges in developing primary data sources, and the high likelihood of a reliance on secondary data sources. This suggested an alternative approach to demand modelling that was not dependent on choice models; namely a suite of continuous choice models in which we capture the actual activities undertaken by each mode on both the demand and supply side at high spatial resolution.

Research highlights► Paper sets out the challenges faced when data is not at the appropriate level of spatial disaggregation. ► Shows one way of forecasting higher spatial resolution demand from lower spatial resolution. ► Offers the first effort to develop a regional travel demand model system in Australia.

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