Simulating Transport and Land Use Interdependencies for Strategic Urban Planning-An Agent Based Based Modelling Approach
Authored by Pascal Perez, Huynh Nam, Matthew Berryman, Johan Barthelemy
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3390/systems3040177
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Platforms:
C++
Repast
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Agent based modelling has been widely accepted as a promising tool for
urban planning purposes thanks to its capability to provide
sophisticated insights into the social behaviours and the
interdependencies that characterise urban systems. In this paper, we
report on an agent based model, called TransMob, which explicitly
simulates the mutual dynamics between demographic evolution, transport
demands, housing needs and the eventual change in the average
satisfaction of the residents of an urban area. The ability to reproduce
such dynamics is a unique feature that has not been found in many of the
like agent based models in the literature. TransMob, is constituted by
six major modules: synthetic population, perceived liveability, travel
diary assignment, traffic micro-simulator, residential location choice, and travel mode choice. TransMob is used to simulate the dynamics of a
metropolitan area in South East of Sydney, Australia, in 2006 and 2011, with demographic evolution. The results are favourably compared against
survey data for the area in 2011, therefore validating the capability of
TransMob to reproduce the observed complexity of an urban area. We also
report on the application of TransMob to simulate various hypothetical
scenarios of urban planning policies. We conclude with discussions on
current limitations of TransMob, which serve as suggestions for future
developments.
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