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Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
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- Bus occupants (2)
- Information storage and retrieval systems -- Applications for local transit -- Evaluation (2)
- Travel time -- Data processing (2)
- 1990 Nationwide Personal Transportation Survey (1)
- Automobile parking -- Influence of local transit on (1)
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- Cities and towns -- Growth (1)
- City planning -- Oregon -- Portland (1)
- City planning -- Oregon -- Portland Metro Area (1)
- Highway planning -- Effect of urban growth on (1)
- Infrastructure (Economics) (1)
- Street railroads -- Effect on urban development (1)
- Traffic regulations (1)
- Transportation -- Planning (1)
- Transportation and state (1)
- Urban growth management study (1)
- Urban transportation (1)
- Urbanization -- United States (1)
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
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Travel And Parking Behavior In The United States, Gerard C. Mildner, James G. Strathman, Martha J. Bianco
Travel And Parking Behavior In The United States, Gerard C. Mildner, James G. Strathman, Martha J. Bianco
Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports
This paper looks at the connection between the regulation of parking by cities, transit service levels, and travel and parking behavior in the United States. Travel behavior information comes from the 1990 Nationwide Personal Transportation Survey (NPTS) and the Federal Urban Mass Transportation Administration’s 1990 Section 15 Report. Data on the current state of parking programs in place in central business districts of the U.S. is identified through telephone interviews of local officials responsible for parking policies from the twenty cities identified in the NPTS. The travel behavior analyses and the data from the parking officials interviews were combined with …
Exurban Development, Transportation Infrastructure And Access Management, Philip J. Wuest
Exurban Development, Transportation Infrastructure And Access Management, Philip J. Wuest
Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports
This paper explores the changing role of state highway corridors in an era of continued urban growth and decentralization. Its primary focus is on the impact of exurban development on state highway corridors and on the policy of access management to control or limit those impacts. The role of access management in distributing the benefits and costs of access to public facilities is outlined. As urban areas expand at the fringe, it is important to clarify to what extent the public good of roadways is diminished by direct corridor access by the private sector. This work is timely and relevant …
Transit Time Internet Access: Prototype And Progress, Janet Vorvick
Transit Time Internet Access: Prototype And Progress, Janet Vorvick
Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports
Transit Time Internet Access Version (TTIA1) is a prototype messaging program which delivers real-time bus schedule information to users of the Internet. Using the World Wide Web and the well developed hypertext markup language (html), TTIA1 allows a bus user to request and receive schedule deviation information about a specific bus at a specific timepoint. TTIA1 is part of a project whose goal is to evaluate the effect on riders behavior and riders level of satisfaction of actual arrival time information.
Neotraditional Design: Resisting The Decentralizing Forces Of New Spatial Technologies, Kenneth Dueker, Martha J. Bianco
Neotraditional Design: Resisting The Decentralizing Forces Of New Spatial Technologies, Kenneth Dueker, Martha J. Bianco
Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports
The New Urbanist, or Neotraditional, movement that has characterized urban planning since the beginning of the 1990s has a vision of how people should live, work, and travel in a manner that, planners believe, will be "best" for society and for the environment. At the core of this vision is the notion that a return to the high densities, architectural form, and lifestyle of the period prior to World War II will result in a better society. A question that is ignored by the neotraditional proposals is the extent to which changing technologies might make calls for higher densities obsolete. …
Bus Stop Based Schedule Database For The Transit Time Internet, Jun Qui
Bus Stop Based Schedule Database For The Transit Time Internet, Jun Qui
Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports
Advanced Public Transportation Systems (APTS) are a subset of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS). Bus Dispatch Systems (BDS) are importatnt components of APTS. Based on the Automatic Vehicle Location (AVL) technology, the BDS generates exception reports for buses not adhering to their schedule. A Transit Time Internet Access System (TTIA) is under development. It currently reports bus schedule times and bus arrival times for time points (abbreviate as TP) along routes. The objective of a subsequent version of the TTIA is to provide user with schedule time at the bus stop level. This a report on progress to estimate stop level …
Impact Of The Urban Growth Boundary On Metropolitan Housing Markets, Gerard C. Mildner, Kenneth Dueker, Anthony M. Rufolo
Impact Of The Urban Growth Boundary On Metropolitan Housing Markets, Gerard C. Mildner, Kenneth Dueker, Anthony M. Rufolo
Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports
As required by state law, Metro has conducted an "Urban Growth Report" and a "Housing Needs Analysis" to determine whether the currant Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) surrounding the Portland metropolitan area is sufficient to handle the increase in population and number of households expected over the next 20 years. Mr. Don Morissette commissioned Portland State University's Center for Urban Studies to assess whether the techniques used in theses two studies were appropriate and to assess the impact of the UGB on housing markets in the Portland metropolitan area generally. The focus will be be on the impact of the UGB …