118 research outputs found

    Managing transportation demand in Singapore

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    Singapore has long held a well deserved reputation for being at the cutting edge in the field of managing the demand for car use. But in addition to the high profile policies of charging for road use and rationing the number vehicle licences through a vehicle quota system, the South East Asian city state has also been innovative with a number of supporting policies too. In this article Marcus Enoch takes a more rounded look at the Singapore experience

    UK parking cash out experience, and lessons from California

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    Controlling parking – either by restricting the number of spaces available, or by charging users to park – has long been acknowledged as one of the more effective elements in any strategy to reduce car use. But it is this very effectiveness that also often makes such punitive measures extremely unpopular, and therefore difficult to introduce. A more acceptable measure is the idea of paying to persuade drivers not to use their cars for certain trips – i.e. effectively bribe motorists to use an alternative mode. One application of this principal – the parking cash out – is becoming increasingly common in the UK. This article looks at the performance of current UK parking cash out examples and compares this experience to California where parking cash out has become a mainstream policy measure

    Car clubs : lessons from the Netherlands and San Francisco

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    Car clubs are now attracting support from a number of organisations in the UK but as yet no real champion has emerged. Marcus Enoch argues that the lesson from the Netherlands and San Francisco is that national or local government support is critical in helping car clubs to get established

    Demand Responsive Transport : lessons to be learnt from less developed countries

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    Marcus Enoch examines three Demand Responsive Transport (DRT) schemes which are being successfully operated in Turkey, Hong Kong and Mauritius and asks what the UK can learn from their experiences

    Getting the bus to work : why quality bus corridors work in Dublin

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    Dublin has achieved a remarkable increase in bus patronage through the introduction of quality bus corridors. Marcus Enoch reports on Dublin’s success which is founded on properly implemented bus lanes. He concludes that the key to persauding car users to switch to the bus is that the bus journey time must be consistently and significantly less than that taken by car

    A possible blueprint for mainstreaming travel plans in the UK?

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    The purpose of this paper is to briefly review the evolution of the travel plan since its introduction in the UK just over a decade ago, and then draw on this to suggest how travel plans may develop over the next ten years. The paper draws on existing literature and the experience of the authors and colleagues to suggest that travel plans have gradually shifted from being predominantly a niche product towards being an integrated, comprehensive yet still focused tool in three senses: segment, scale and scope, and proposes that a fourth element ‘structure’ is also important. It then suggests that policy makers might use these observations to provide an eventual target destination that might inform a more strategic approach as to the potential of the travel plan in the future and sets out some possible intermediate stops along the way

    Pooling together : why the vanpool works in the US and the Netherlands

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    A vanpool is a group of 7-15 people who commute together on a regular basis in what is called in the USA a van – but what we would call a minibus. The vanpool concept is predicated on the voluntary driver, and expenses are shared among the group. Largely as a result, vanpools are widely regarded in the USA as being the most cost-effective transportation demand management measures for employers to support. Currently there are more than 10,000 vanpools in the USA, which are operated by private operators, employers and public agencies. In addition, vanpools are beginning to be developed in the Netherlands. However, as yet they are almost unknown in the UK. The purpose of this article is to identify why this is the case by looking at vanpools in the United States and the Netherlands

    Recouping public transport costs from gains in land values

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    Marcus Enoch examines the experiences of Hong Kong and Copenhagen where efforts have been made to exploit the windfall increase in land values related to transport developments. He asks whether this approach can be made to work in the UK

    Travel plans: opportunities for ICT

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    Site-based mobility management or 'travel plans' address the transport problem by engaging with those organisations such as employers that are directly responsible for generating the demand for travel, and hence have the potential to have a major impact on transport policy. To do this effectively however, travel plans need to be reoriented to be made more relevant to the needs of these organisations, whilst the policy framework in which they operate needs modifying to better support their diffusion and enhance their effectiveness. One key barrier, is a lack of available tools for these reoriented travel plans to apply. This paper therefore seeks to help identify potential market niches where ICT developers could help address this issue. Specifically, a framework is presented and suggestions offered as to which particular areas may benefit most from ICT interventions

    How a rapid modal convergence into a universal automated taxi service could be the future for local passenger transport

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    The world is changing rapidly. Yet a common assumption is that cars, buses and taxis will remain the dominant local passenger transport modes in the coming decades. This concept paper draws on literature sources and on discussions with industry stakeholders to look anew at the local passenger transport sector in the light of broader societal trends to suggest an alternative future, and to offer insights to practitioners and policy makers. The paper finds that the traditional modes of car, bus and taxi are slowly beginning to lose market share to intermediate modes such as shared taxis, lift sharing schemes, DRT services and car clubs whilst numerous technological and market trends are combining to accelerate this process of ‘modal convergence’. Taken together, these trends could revolutionise how we move about, with one possible outcome being the emergence of a single dominant passenger mode of an automated universal taxi system or dial-a-pod
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