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ANNEX B
Personal Accessibility Analysis
B1. Personal accessibility can be affected by a number
of factors including:
- An individual's own mobility;
- By the physical disposition of destinations
relative to the individual;
- By the availability of means of transport;
- Or by a combination of the three.
B2. There are 3 overlapping types of approach that can
be used in accessibility analysis. All accessibility
approaches relate to a specific location - an origin or a
destination - and include zoning aspects and opportunity
and deterrent features. All three approaches have a role to
play in policy and project appraisal since different
decisions require information to be presented in different
ways.
B3. The choice of appraisal technique for any individual
decision needs to be of an accuracy appropriate to the
particular situation, with the resources devoted to the
analysis being commensurate with the scale of the
circumstances. Examples are given in Table 2 overleaf.
Analysis to support practical decision making will usually
benefit from a more rigorous multi-criteria framework
approach. Local authorities may wish to develop
supplementary planning guidance relating to
accessibility.
B4. Clear policies relating to a group of people for a
particular purpose can be analysed in a straightforward
manner. Accessibility analysis can though become complex
and confusing if the question being asked is not identified
at the outset. It is important therefore for all analyses
to define problems clearly, gather the required supporting
information and involve the relevant stakeholders.
Consistent and rigorous techniques can assist in building
consensus between various stakeholders.
Simple Approach:
B5. Isochrones are used to demonstrate the geographical
distribution of impacts. This is the most commonly used
approach internationally. It simplifies a given problem by
defining thresholds. For the approach to be useful the
choice of thresholds must accurately reflect some aspect of
travel behaviour which is specific to local
characteristics. This is because measures of accessibility
have different values in different areas.
Opportunity Approach:
B6. This sums all the available opportunities and takes
into account a measure of deterrence related to how easily
opportunities can be reached. Opportunity indices are
relatively easy to interpret.
Value Approach:
B7. This measure considers the attractiveness of the
available opportunities to represent their value as a
transport choice in terms of time or cost. These indices
measure efficiency but are less descriptive.
Zoning Aspect:
B8. This is a variable element. The level of detail is
dependent on the policy / proposal being examined.
Strategic issues will utilise wider geographical areas
resulting in a more coarse zoning system. Larger zones
provide a valuable overview of areas. Local issues will
utilise more detailed localised representation. This will
be much more time consuming and in some cases
uneconomic.
Opportunity Features:
For example;
- Population: Total number of people; employment
status; and age;
- Employment:Number of employees by location;
- Health:Presence or absence of a facility;
- Supermarkets:Floorspace in square footage;
- Banks/ Building Societies: Numbers of branches up
to a maximum of 5 representing the availability of
choice;
- Chemists: Presence or absence of a facility;
- Petrol stations:Presence or absence of a
facility;
- Post officesPresence or absence of a facility.
B9. Origin accessibility considers opportunities
available to an individual or business. The opportunity is
therefore based on the land uses at alternative
destinations.
B10. Destination accessibility considers catchments for
a destination. The opportunity is therefore based on land
uses and types of traveller at alternative origins.
Deterrent Features:
For example;
- Time,
- Cost,
- Distance,
- The need to carry goods and/or other people.
B11. These features affect the perceptions of travel and
therefore influence real behavioural patterns. It is
recommended that deterrence features of car available
and non-car available trips is considered
as many trips involve a number of modes and for non-car
available trips the car options are excluded from the
calculation.
Table 2. Types of Accessibility
Analysis
Index | Description and Uses |
Simple Measures |
Catchment / Contour Indices | These
count the number of jobs, shops etc
within a thresholds travel cost (distance/time
etc) from a defined location. They are used for
a whole variety of planning purposes for both
land use and transport infrastructure and are
often used by developers to consider the
commercial viability of a potential development
location. |
Access to Public Transport | These
measure walking access time to the
public transport services. Walking time or
distance thresholds to the public transport
services are set and summed across all the
available services. The quality of public
transport being accessed is categorised on a
scale which takes account of service frequency,
mode and reliability. (Simple but limited
scope). |
Peripherality Indices / Rural
Accessibility | These identify
thresholds in terms of cost, distance,
time etc from defined types of opportunity.
They are usually calculated from major centres
of population (incl. towns or services such as
hospitals) |
Time Space Geographic Measures | These measures simplify travel behaviour and
choice in terms of the opportunities available
within a limited travel budget time. The
threshold is therefore travel time available
for an individual or group. |
Opportunity Measures |
Hansen Indices | The simple measures above are all special
forms of Hansen indices incorporating
thresholds to simplify data or analysis
requirements. |
Shimbel Measures | Similar to above but here all specified
opportunities are assumed to have the same
weighting. The measure is simply the sum of the
cost (time etc) to each of the
opportunities. |
'Economic Potential' Measures | Where the opportunities being considered in
the Hansen index are regional incomes, and the
deterrence function is measured in distance,
then the accessibility index is sometimes
describes as the economic potential of a
location. |
Value Measures |
Utility Based Measures | These measure the value to an individual or
group of the choices available to them. The
main difference to those above is that
additional opportunities only provide an
increase in accessibility if they provide some
additional value. If there is already a surfeit
of opportunities adding more will result in
little change in the index. The normal units of
measurement are generalised cost or time. |
B12. In considering the results of the accessibility
analysis it should be remembered that the measures are
intended to give only a general indication of levels of
accessibility. They are though of assistance in identifying
practical solutions and delivering schemes that will be of
real benefit.
B13. Planning authorities should establish
'accessibility profiles' for sites taking into account the
elements below. The profiles should reflect the catchment
area served, likely quality of service and result in
relative indicators of accessibility for different
sites.
- Transport system accessibility by population sector
to an opportunity:
- A transport improvement or an increase in the
number of opportunities will increase
accessibility.
- The scale of change is not easily assessed
through qualitative comparisons.
- Accessibility to public transport services:
- This is particularly useful if public transport
services can be classified accurately in terms of
their frequency or destination.
- Obtaining detailed data on origins,
destinations and routes of services can be a major
exercise.
- For accessibility of housing to public
transport the recommended guidelines are less than
400m to bus services and up to 800m to rail
services.
- Accessibility can be categorised, for example
weak or strong.
- Accessibility to local facilities by walking and
cycling:
- A maximum threshold of 1600m for walking is
broadly in line with observed travel
behaviour.
- If there is a significant population within
800m then improvements to the quality of walking
and cycling networks will increase
accessibility.
- Ratios comparing accessibility for different
mobility groups:
- One of the most useful measures is the ratio of
accessibility for car available to non-car
available people.
- These ratios allow consistent comparisons to be
made between locations.
- Accessibility for freight:
- This is best undertaken using logistics
management software.
- It is usually undertaken at an individual
company level.
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