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Oregon Transportation Research and Education Consortium

No More Freeways: Urban Land Use-Transportation Dynamics without Freeway Capacity Expansion

Principal Investigator:  Lei Zhang, Oregon State University

Project Summary:
Urban areas in the U.S. have grown at a fast pace in the last several decades. Many attribute the sprawling land use development pattern to the construction and expansion of limited access freeways, which initially greatly improved urban mobility but have since experienced deteriorating level of service. Urban traffic congestion is a serious and continuously growing problem in many cities [1]. It is now widely acknowledged that we cannot build our way out of congestion due to induced demand, increasing land acquisition and construction costs, and public oppositions to more freeways. A recent study [2] finds that 1,150 lane-miles of new freeways would be required in the next twenty years to maintain uncongested traffic flows in the Twin Cities, Minnesota. That represents a 70% expansion of the existing freeway system in the Twin Cities, and an obviously impractical investment scenario. Most U.S. cities are employing a variety of transportation management, multimodal, and to a lesser... View Full Summary


Sponsors:
Oregon State University Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering


Project Details:

Project Type: Research
Start Date: October 1, 2007
End Date: September 30, 2008
Related Projects: None
Research Area: Integration of Land Use and Transportation

Additional Information:

INCOMPLETE: Principal investigator Dr. Lei Zhang has moved to the University of Maryland and has not submitted any progress reports or final reports for this work.