Conception and use of an individual-based model of residential choice in a planning decision process. Feedback from an experimental trial in the city of Besancon, France
Authored by Cecile Tannier, Joanne Hirtzel, Richard Stephenson, Armelle Couillet, Gilles Vuidel, Samy Youssoufi
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.progress.2015.04.001
Sponsors:
European Union
Regional Council of Franche-Comté
Platforms:
MobiSim
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In this paper, we present an experimental trial involving the use of a
complex spatial simulation platform to support a planning decision
process in the city of Besancon (eastern France). In medium-sized towns
across France, households with children are leaving to settle in
periurban areas, and Besancon is no exception. Under those
circumstances, the political objective of the Besancon City authority is
to keep middle- and high-income households with children within the
city. The simulation platform MobiSim was used in this context to
explore the possible outcomes of spatial planning policies, set by both
the Greater Besancon authority (Besancon and the surrounding periurban
communities) and the city of Besancon, on residential migrations over a
20 year period. MobiSim integrates several models representing
demographic, social, economic, and spatial processes. Modelled entities
are individuals and dwellings. Rules determine how individuals form
households. Other rules locate dwellings in buildings.
The experimental trial began in October 2012. It involved two
researchers in geography and planning from the University of
Franche-Comte (Besancon, France) and two planning practitioners working
in Besancon city council's planning service: the Department of Planning, Projects and Forward Planning. The first stage of the trial was the
collective definition and simulation of a baseline position simply
extending existing trends from 2010 to 2030: the `Business as usual'
scenario. The second stage was a collective reflection on possible
modifications to some of the variables and parameters of this scenario
in order to simulate a pro-active policy of housing construction in the
medium term.
Under the conditions represented in the model, the `Pro-active housing
construction' scenario in Besancon allows an overall reduction of
migration flows from Besangon to the surrounding periurban areas. More
single parent families choose to reside in Besancon during the whole
simulation time. Couples with children, however, choose preferentially
to reside in Besancon until 2022 only. At this date, the controlled
housing developments become less numerous.
This experimental trial gave the researchers and the planning actors
involved in it the occasion to exchange their scientific knowledge and
their empirical knowledge. The simulation of the `Business as usual'
scenario was, as it were, a means to thoroughly explore one possible
future. This then led the group to discuss possible planning actions
designed to reduce migration flows of households with children out of
Besancon into periurban areas.
The trial also shows some limitations: it highlights that this kind of
PSS makes the planning actors heavily dependent on the expertise of the
researchers for every stage of the process. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Agent-based model
behavior
Land-use
Optimization
Location
Physical-activity
Neighborhood satisfaction
Support-systems
Urban forest
Tel-aviv