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APPENDIX B: DATA AVAILABILITY
B. data availability and sources
B.1 This appendix reviews Scottish and
UK data that is available for those
wishing to prepare a Transport Assessment and
Implementation document for their development. The scale of
analysis required for the Transport Assessment stage will
vary widely between proposed developments.
Journey Time and Distance Data
B.2 Journey times and distances will be used to
calculate isochrones and to determine catchment areas. A
large number of sources are available, ranging from simple
paper based maps to sophisticated electronic transport
models.
B.3 A distinction between data sources can be made on
the basis of how journey time information is supplied. Some
data sources/software packages supply information on an
interrogative basis, i.e. for specific pairs of origins and
destinations at a time. For instance, a rail journey
planner can be used to provide journey times between two
stations on the rail network. Other data sources or systems
will be able to provide journey times for a range of
origin-destination (O-D) pairs at a time. Transport models
for instance, where available, can be used to supply
journey time matrices for car or public transport modes for
any combination of O-Ds in a study area.
Modal Split
B.4 One area of concern is the paucity of research that
can predict the effects of measures designed to alter modal
split. Many research projects have been undertaken to
measure the effect on modal split of measures varying from
new light rail networks to traffic calming, and persuasion
campaigns. Research findings often contradict one another,
and the caution on the part of researchers can cast doubt
that many measures would have any significant measurable
effects.
B.5 The following comments should be made:
- Most exercises try to isolate the effects of one
policy in a 'laboratory situation'. Such an approach
does not generally produce results because of
background influences, and the length of time needed
between studies.
- Few studies measure a package of policy measures,
which tends to be the situation where policy makers are
trying to influence behaviour. Since one package is
unlikely to be the same as another package they are
equally difficult to compare.
B.6 Recent publications, such as that by Rye and
McGuigan (2000) "Green Commuter Plans - Do they work" are
starting to provide a framework for understanding what
measures may work in combination with others, and the
effectiveness that can be expected. This understanding will
grow rapidly as more Travel Plans are implemented and as
monitoring grows.
B.7 It must be recognised that many measures designed to
encourage access by means other than the car will only have
a minor effect when introduced on their own. As part of a
package of measures, however, their impact can be
significant. Research to investigate the combined impact of
a range of measures is developing and in the future will be
of use in producing a Transport Assessment and
Implementation document.
Trip Databases
B.8 Trip generation databases such as
GENERATE,
TRAVL and
TRICS are important sources of
information on car travel but their information on non-car
travel is limited. Since the databases do not yet contain
much information on non-car transport impacts or on
developments with operational Travel Plans, they should be
employed with caution in a Transport Assessment - possibly
as a starting point for the base level of travel and modal
share for example. Although their data content is evolving
to become more multi-modal, they were originally created to
support
TIAs, with an overall focus on car
travel and so do not provide all the data required for a
Transport Assessment. In addition, their use may tend to
replicate past travel patterns, thus encouraging developers
to provide for more car travel than is necessary, rather
than promoting sustainable modes as current government
policy advocates.
B.9 Nevertheless, for the present, these databases
remain necessary tools, since they provide more information
on behaviour than other surveys. Furthermore they are now
evolving to allow inclusion of data for modes other than
the car. In time, as the expanded new data set continues to
grow, they will provide a useful source of information for
the various new initiatives being developed and delivered
currently.
Trip Generation and Trip Rates
B.10
TRICS (Trip Rate Information and
Computing System) is a large database containing traffic
count data for a number of days at a large number of sites
of different categories of land-use. In addition the
database also contains information on the size of the
development (retail floor area, office space, number of
residential units, etc.). The database contains data for a
large number of sites throughout the country and is updated
regularly. The large data set traditionally has a south
east of England bias although the current data collection
programme is addressing this issue.
B.11
TRICS allows the user to calculate trip
rates from individual or a group of selected development
sites, which can be selected by the user imposing a range
of criteria, such as Gross Floor Area, Retail Floor Area,
number of employees etc. The database is generally
constructed from vehicle counts only. Most records contain
no information on trip lengths, car occupancy levels,
origin-destination information, or trips by public
transport, on foot or by bicycle. However, a number of
surveys have now taken place and some sites with
multi-modal data have been incorporated.
B.12 Two technical terms must be understood:
- "Trip generation" refers to trips associated with a
land use, such as trips to a hospital.
- "Trip rates" refer to trips per time period, and
can be personal trip rates (as in trips per person per
day) or trips associated with a land use per day.
B.13 The selection of a trip rate is important in
estimating the travel generation of a site. The following
factors need to be taken into account in selecting a
rate:
- the size of the walking catchment;
- the propensity to cycle;
- the type and quality of public transport
provision;
- the level of on-site parking restraint;
- whether there are parking controls in the vicinity
of the scheme;
- the potential for linked trip opportunities;
and
- for retail sites, competition within the
locality.
B.14 In the past
TIAs have compared the proposed
development with similar ones, and have been careful not to
underestimate the vehicle trip generation. Typically the
"85th percentile" trip rate has been chosen. This means
that "of 100 similar developments, the proposed development
will have trip generation characteristics corresponding to
the 85th of these when their trip generation
characteristics are placed in order". This approach has
often resulted in
TIAs assuming higher than average
traffic levels. This discourages other modes of transport,
given that if significant parking is provided it will
reduce the likelihood of people using non-car modes.
B.15 In preparing Transport Assessments it is important
to consider a wide range of trip generation rates such as
15th, 50th and 85th percentile trip rates. Depending on the
nature of the development it is likely that a pair of lower
(15th and 50th) or higher (50th and 85th) rates will be
appropriate for most developments. If satisfactory measures
designed to reduce car use at proposed developments are
included, e.g. maximum parking standards, it is hoped that
the higher rates will seldom be needed. The difference
between 15th and 85th percentile rates can be large,
involving factors of between 2 and 4. Care must be taken
when using the lower rates, particularly with maximum
parking standards, that lower car use can actually be
achieved.
Person-trip Travel Surveys
B.16 It is important to undertake a person-trip based
assessment for all developments with significant transport
implications. The main sources of person trip data in
Scotland are currently: the National Travel Survey; the
Census; and local movement surveys (if conducted by local
authorities). However, these surveys are not primarily
designed for use in Transport Assessment and Implementation
and should be used with care:
- The National Travel Survey contains
detailed information and can be useful for estimating
trip generation from housing developments. However, it
records journey purposes (such as "shopping") rather
than trips to development types (e.g. "corner shop",
"supermarket", or "town centre"), and it cannot be used
for detailed local analysis.
- The National Census deals with
home-based work journeys only, and records only the
mode of travel for the main part of the journey. This
can obscure information which is of use in Transport
Assessment and Implementation such as the mode used to
leave or arrive at a development.
- Local movement surveys can vary in
their value depending on the purposes for which they
have been carried out, and the detail included.
B.17 A major benefit of the National Travel Survey and
the Census is that there is information on all modes, in
contrast with the focus on car use that is common in
vehicle databases. However, the
NTS and Census cover trips from housing,
so a likely difficulty will lie in estimating trips to and
from other land uses although this can be overcome.
Developers are recommended to inquire about the
availability of area data from the local authority that may
assist in the preparation of a Transport Assessment and
Implementation document.
Estimating Modal Split
B.18 Modal split estimates can draw on catchment area
analysis, comparing travel behaviour with activity
elsewhere and supported by reasoned argument about likely
travel behaviour. However, it may be possible to make good
estimates with less emphasis on these techniques by
comparisons with similar existing developments, and
including the effect of proposed measures to influence
travel in the proposal. In seeking suitable sites, one
should look for comparable locations, scale, public
transport provision and non-car accessibility.
B.19 Using these techniques should provide estimates of
the numbers travelling to the site, their choice of mode,
and the overall modal split.
B.20 In general:
- Data for analysing populations within catchments
according to travel times are available for certain
areas to a high degree of accuracy using
GIS sources linked to population
data. But outside major urban areas the information,
especially with regard to public transport, may be more
difficult to come by.
- For rural areas access by non-car modes may be
simple to calculate without data sources other than
maps, and bus timetables. In between the larger urban
areas and rural areas, and for smaller developments
within larger urban areas, data for complex analyses
will be difficult or impossible to obtain, or may be
too costly for smaller developers to gain access
to.
- Data on travel behaviour from which modal split
predictions might be made is good at the national
level, but only at the level of trip making for
different journey purposes. For journeys by non-car
modes to specific developments (especially 'new types'
of development such as multiplex cinemas) data
availability is not good.
Road Networks
B.21 For the purpose of undertaking Transport Assessment
and Implementation four road network data sets based on
OSCAR (Ordnance Survey Centre Alignment
Of Roads), are available, with a varying degree of detail.
Roads and the information associated with them are modelled
in a vector network of links and nodes (Source:
www.ons.gov.uk).
Similar networks from other suppliers are also
available.
- OSCAR Asset-manager is the most
detailed of these and provides a comprehensive
representation of all public and selected private
roads. The whole country is covered and available at
levels of detail relating to 1:1250, 1:2500, and
1:10000 scales.
- OSCAR Route-Manager has been
designed for regional routing and networking
requirements. The entire public road network is
included, with the exception of short cul-de-sacs.
Complex road junctions are shown as single nodes and
multi-carriageways as single links.
- OSCAR Traffic-Manager includes all
public and selected private roads and includes Drive
Restriction Information (
DRI). Drive Restriction Information
shows the restrictions, which affect the route of a
vehicle, such as one-way streets or banned turns.
DRI is available for all classified
roads, and within the urban envelope of all
Metropolitan areas and selected District Council areas.
In addition, the centres of 300 towns are also
available.
- OSCAR Network-Manager has more
simplified road geometry than the other road products,
containing only Motorways, A and B roads.
Deriving Walk and Cycle Times
B.22 Road networks, like
OSCAR can be used to derive walk and
cycle access times. Distances between origin and
destination pairs via the network are calculated and
converted into time using an assumed average travel speed.
It will generally be necessary to use the most detailed
networks available. The following should be noted:
- All roads in the network (including motorways and
inappropriate roads) will be included in the
calculation, but paths and other shortcuts will
not.
- Euclidean (straight line) distances may be
calculated with assumed average speeds, but that would
not take into account the characteristics of the actual
walking network, such as hills or pedestrian
crossings.
B.23 This data source is inadequate for realistic
walking and cycling catchment area calculation unless
specially adapted to overcome the above.
B.24 A three-year Scottish Cycling Development project
was carried out in Scotland in 1997. One of the outputs is
a Scottish Cycling database on the Internet which contains
information on cycle networks which can be used to derive
cycle access times. (
www.scottishcycling.co.uk)
Deriving Car Drive Times
B.25 A number of software packages are available (within
GIS systems) which perform shortest path
calculations through road networks and convert distances
into times. In most cases the road network is divided into
different road types and a database containing typical
speeds by road type is used to derive link times. Routing
algorithms are used to calculate a shortest path. Off-peak
travel times and free flow traffic conditions are usually
used in calculations. For the purposes of Transport
Assessment and Implementation it might be necessary to
represent a network for the
AM or
PM peak period. Although road speeds can
be customised to reflect local conditions, the process to
validate journey times in a network might be
time-consuming.
B.26 Examples of software packages to calculate road
journey times include Drivetime, RouteView, Geoconcept, and
Autoroute. Drivetime contains 38 classes of roads with
associated speeds. Autoroute is most suitable to derive
journey times at a national level. It includes major roads
only and uses 10 categories of roads in its journey time
calculation. Autoroute is used on an interrogative basis
and only allows the user to look at one origin-destination
pair at a time.
Public Transport Networks
B.27 There are various paper-based data sources
available providing information on public transport
networks. In Scotland, the Traffic Commissioners and the
relevant local authority, or Strathclyde Passenger
Transport (
SPT) in the areas covered by
SPT, should have information on routes
operating, and may have mechanisms in place for obtaining
information from public transport operators. Often printed
timetables are provided. Details on the rail network can be
found in the Great Britain Passenger Timetable. Details of
bus operators can be found at
www.barrydoe.plus.com
B.28 Information on the rail network, including station
locations is available in digital format from a number of
suppliers. Information on bus networks is not widely
available in digital format, although it would be possible
to represent a bus network in
GIS by selecting roads served by buses
as a subset of one of the road networks.
B.29 Calculating journey times through a public
transport network is more complicated. It is not just a
matter of selecting routes served by buses and using
average bus speeds as various other elements need to be
taken into account, including:
- The time to walk to a bus stop or station;
- Wait time at the bus stop;
- The travel time spent on the bus;
- Interchange time (if relevant); and
- The time to walk from the bus stop to reach a
destination.
Deriving Public Transport Journey
Times
B.30 Currently, data and software to provide
door-to-door public transport journey times is not readily
available without a large degree of effort, unless special
local exercises have been undertaken. The data generally
exists to allow such exercises, but the effort involved
might only be justified for large development proposals.
Availability of accessibility planning software tools is
slowly changing this perspective.
B.31 Information about railway station locations and
railway lines is widely available in digital format for use
with
GIS. Electronic data on bus stop
locations is less widely available, although databases tend
to exist in the larger Metropolitan areas. Alternatively,
bus operators might be able to supply information on bus
stop locations. Data on service patterns and frequencies
will generally be paper based and locally available, though
increasingly they are available on the internet. Walking
times to and from rail stations and bus stops can be
calculated in a similar way as described under the heading
'Deriving walk and cycle times'.
Bus and Coach Statistics
B.32 These statistics provide information about the
trends in bus and coach services in Scotland, and include
data on distances travelled by vehicles, numbers of bus
passenger journeys, fare indices, passenger receipts,
public transport support, operating costs, vehicle stock
and staffing. The most recent Statistical Bulletin
Transport Series Trn/2005/1 Bus and Coach Statistics:
2003-2004 was published in March 2005. Bus and Coach
Statistics are produced annually. The data may contribute
to the assessment by providing background information.
National Rail Journey Planner
B.33 The National Rail journey planner can be used to
provide journey times between any two stations served by
the National Rail network. Service patterns and frequencies
as well as interchanges can also be derived.
Bus Journey Planners (Traveline and Transport
Direct)
B.34 A number of bus journey planners are available
through the Internet allowing the user to identify bus
journey time information for a number of networks around
the country (free of charge), although there appears to be
much variation in the quality of information supplied.
Examples include express services in Scotland, the Scottish
Citylink website at
www.citylink.co.uk
and
www.transportdirect.info.
Telephone Enquiry Lines and "
PTI" data
B.35 The Transport White Papers called for a Public
Transport Information (
PTI) system to be systematically
extended across the
UK. Work is well advanced and is being
led in Scotland by a consortium of transport operators and
local authorities and the Scottish Executive. "Traveline"
call centres have been set up in Scotland and in regions
throughout the
UK which can be accessed by a single
telephone number. Callers are automatically connected to
the nearest call centre. There is an easy transfer of calls
between call centres to access information not covered by
the centre a caller is connected to. The information
available includes that currently provided by the National
Rail Enquiry Service (
NRES).
B.36 As part of this public transport information
system, data on all public transport services in the
UK are being coded for computer
interrogation.
PTI data on public transport is not yet
made available in data form, but when it is, it should be
of great value for public transport system coding. It
should be possible to link this data to a
GIS to use in accessibility
analysis.
B.37
PTI systems should comprise a database
of records disaggregated into bus stop locations, service
network, service details, and route details, which can be
interrogated in order to answer individual enquiries from
passengers.
GIS can be used to display bus stop
locations and route networks, and accessibility analysis
can be carried out on the underlying public transport
service level data. The process of reformatting data can be
simplified by developing an interface between the two
systems.
B.38 The
UK Public Transport Information (
UKPTI) website contains links to a wide
range of local and national public transport operators,
with information on routes, timetables and booking. It can
be found at
www.pti.org.uk .
Transport Modelling Software
B.39 Transport modelling packages may be used for
performing routing calculations through public transport
networks. For each O-D combination journey time, wait time,
interchange time and walk time will be reported and can be
included in journey time matrices. Setting up a transport
model can be a complex task and, depending on the size of
the study area, may require a significant resource
commitment. In some cases, particularly in the case of very
large developments, it may however be necessary.
B.40 A number of software packages are available to
provide information about public transport journey times.
Most of these will be able to provide information on an
interrogative basis providing journey details for one or
more O-D combinations at a time. These might be helpful in
the case of smaller developments.
Land-Use Data
B.41 Information on locations of population, and
facilities such as schools, hospital, etc. will be needed
to calculate catchment areas. Information on land-use and
facilities will also be useful when estimating trips that
will be diverted from existing facilities to new
developments.
National Land Information Service (England and
Wales only)
B.42 The National Land Information Service (
NLIS) is an initiative to provide
national information on land and property.
NLIS is the generic term for a set of
services allowing access via computer to geographically
related information from a large number of sources (both
public and private). The system will be based around a
gazetteer, known as the National Land and Property
Gazetteer (
NLPG). The
NLPG will be a national index of all
land and property units for Great Britain.
The National Census
B.43 The census provides information on the number and
characteristics of people and households for the whole of
the country. Between censuses population estimates are
updated using data from registrations of births and deaths
and estimates of migration based on information on the
number of people changing their general practitioner,
changes in the electorate and other material from sample
surveys.
B.44 Data is available at 'enumeration district' (
ED) level for the 1991 census and at
postcode level for the 2001 census. This allows easier
linkage with other data.
Census Special Workplace Statistics (
CSWS)
B.45 The 1991 and 2001 Censuses asked about people's
place and address of work, and mode used to travel to work.
Means of Travel to Work shows the mode of transport
normally used for the longest part, by distance, of the
journey to work. For the 2001 Census for Scotland place of
study for students and schoolchildren is also included.
Data for a random stratified 10% sample of the 1991 Census
was coded and this forms the
CSWS. This data provides a useful source
for analysing modal split according to distance, type of
area and other characteristics, but would require further
in-depth analysis by experts to provide useful information
for developers carrying out a transport assessment.
B.46
CSWS provides information about persons
in employment by their area of residence. The 'resident
population' base is restricted to those who are employees
or who are self-employed. It covers the full address of the
workplace and how the longest part of the journey by
distance of the person's trip to work is made. Workplace
address postcodes are used for the location. The distance
to work has been calculated as a crow fly-related distance
between the co-ordinates of the home and workplace. This
data can be useful for assessing the realism of predictions
made about mode split and catchments.
Information Held by Various Public
Bodies
B.47 The table below provides an overview of various
types of information held in respect of land-use and
facilities, the organisation holding the data and the type
of data held.
Public Body | Description of information
held | Data coverage |
Local Authority | Information on land use changes | Owner of property, title deeds. licences,
tenancies |
Local authority | Information on facilities | Parks, Leisure facilities, Roads,
Schools Common land, Electoral register,
Conservation areas, Planning policies |
Sportscotland | Information on sports facilities | Sports facilities, Playing fields |
Schools Register | Information on schools | Schools, Further education colleges |
Higher Education Statistics agency | Information on higher education | Higher education colleges, Universities |
Civil Aviation Authority | Airports/ air related facilities | |
Network Rail | Rail facilities | |
NHS and trusts | Hospitals and medical facilities | |
Local Facility Databases
B.48 Data on service centres and facilities (community,
health, education, shopping etc) can be collected at
various levels. Even the most basic of data can be useful
for accessibility purposes; it can be added to as needed.
Useful sources include local knowledge, local development
plans, publicly available directories such as Yellow Pages,
and commercial databases of facilities.
B.49 Many local development plans already include maps
or lists of local facilities such as service centres. Such
lists can be added to by using available data collected
locally, or by use of directories such as Yellow Pages
(which is available on the internet).
Commercial Geo-coded Facilities Data
B.50 Geo-coded retail and service datasets are available
from a variety of companies. They may use existing
databases of such information and 'add value' to them by
undertaking further research, cleaning and checking data,
classifying and summarising records, and geo-coding.
MapInfo sells databases for various land uses including
post offices, banking and finance, hotels etc, public
houses, petrol stations, food retailers, clothing and
footwear, newsagents, household goods stores, services and
estate agents.
Trip Rates and Travel Behaviour
B.51 One of the methods to estimate the likely amount of
traffic a new development might generate is to compare a
development with similar existing developments. A number of
trip databases exist which allow such comparative analysis
to be carried out. It is envisaged that these databases
will continue to have a similar role in the transport
assessment and implementation process, though they will
have to adapt to provide the information on travel by all
modes, and to provide stronger links between catchment
areas and modal split.
B.52 The National Travel Survey (
NTS) is also of use, as well as other
sources of data on travel behaviour.
B.53 The Scottish Household survey is an ongoing survey
funded by the Scottish Executive, and collects a wide range
of data on household characteristics and behaviour,
including transport. Statistical Bulletin
TRN/2004/6 on Household Transport
contained information from the Scottish Household survey on
topics including the accessibility and frequency of bus
services, travel to work/ school/ study and many others. It
is available on the Internet at
www.scotland.gov.uk/stats/bulletins/00375-00.asp
B.54 A recently initiated three year project, Scottish
Neighbourhood Statistics will be creating a database of
local statistics, aimed at informing community planning and
regeneration processes. Amongst the areas it will cover
will be access to services, within which it hopes to
reference the location of key services such as doctor's
surgeries and Post Offices, and model travel times and
accessibility. See
www.scotland.gov.uk/stats/neighbours/neighbour.asp
.
Visits to Tourist Attractions
B.55 The database of Visits to Tourist Attractions
contains information on number of visitors to United
Kingdom tourist attractions with more than 10,000 visitors
in the year. It includes a brief summary text, followed by
many tables, showing the more successful sites by type of
attraction, and lists of sites for Scotland, England, Wales
and Northern Ireland. More detailed presentation of the
survey information is contained in Sightseeing in the
United Kingdom. (Source: Office for National Statistics -
www.ons.org.uk/)
The National Travel Survey
B.56 The National Travel Survey is a survey of household
and individual travel behaviour and characteristics carried
out in Scotland, England and Wales. Since 1989 it has been
conducted as a continuous survey with a sample of about
3,500 households per year, but doubled in scale from 2003.
The data covers:
- Variables for data relating to the household (such
as location, vehicle availability, head of household
characteristics, family structure etc);
- Individual variables (such as age, gender, driving
licence);
- Variables relating to vehicles (such as engine
size, annual mileage); and
- Variables relating to 'journeys' and 'stages' of
journeys (for a period of one week), where a journey is
defined by a trip with a 'purpose', and a stage is the
use of a mode of transport or vehicle.
B.57 In addition, journeys over 25 miles are recorded in
a three-week diary to increase information on longer
journeys.
B.58 While it is of use in providing a general
indication of the kinds of travel behaviour that might be
expected, it is not accurate enough to provide:
- Data on travel to specialised developments, such as
call-centres, since destinations of journeys are only
defined in terms of their 'journey purpose'.
- Data for local areas. The data can be analysed with
confidence to a regional level, but the sampling
structure does not allow for disaggregation at any
lower level (even at County level).
TEMPRO
B.59 The
TEMPRO database might be useful in the
Transport Assessment stage of the reporting process to
determine future year traffic forecasts and to get an
understanding of traffic growth. The
TEMPRO software provides access to the
NTEM (National Trip-end Model) trip-end
forecast database as well as the underlying car ownership
and planning data projections. Data for any year from 1991
through to 2031 can be retrieved and the growth rate
between a selected base and future year provided.
TEMPRO calculates values by
interpolation and displays the results in terms of the
growth between the two selected years at Great Britain,
regional, county and local authority levels.
Other Transport Models
B.60 The Transport Model for Scotland (
TMfS) maintained on behalf of the
Scottish Executive, provides an additional and powerful
tool for forecasting traffic at the strategic level. Other
models held by authorities and the
SITM model, maintained by Strathclyde
Passenger Transport (
SPT), complement
TMfS. Access and use of such models will
often require additional resources and will have timescale
implications that need to be considered and planned.
Scottish Transport Statistics
B.61 This compendium of statistics, which covers road
transport vehicles, bus and coach travel, road freight,
toll bridges, the road network, road traffic, injury road
accidents, rail services, air transport, water transport,
finance and personal and cross-modal travel for Scotland
contains descriptive text, tables and charts. It is
published annually. The Statistics also cover trends over a
10-year period in the areas, as well as some longer-term
trends and compares with some key statistics for Great
Britain.
Monitoring Studies of Travel Plans
B.62 Travel Plans and other measures are being
increasingly monitored but the level of understanding about
which measures have significant impacts on travel behaviour
and modal choice for different developments is still at an
early stage of development. Reports such as that by Rye and
McGuigan "Green Commuter Plans - Do they work?" (2000)
shows that we are now at the stage where informed
statements can be made, but caution should be exercised if
transferring such research findings to proposed
developments where the details of users, and measures to be
utilised, are not fully known.
Conclusions
B.63 The data available is suitable for many Transport
Assessment and Implementation reports. It can be of
variable quality, with much depending on the type of area
in which a development is proposed, and the resources
available to the developer undertaking the assessment. Data
exists to analyse and predict modal split, but as with any
forecasting procedure the output forecasts may be of
questionable accuracy and validity.
B.64 If the Transport Assessment stage of the assessment
is to be practicable it must be straightforward to carry
out and be understandable by many people (including the
developers, planning inquiry reporters, and others).
Existing data sources will adapt over time to include
additional data, and new data sources may be created so
that in future developers will be able to draw on a wider
range of data than currently exists. The monitoring stage
of the assessment will assist in this regard.
B.65 In the meantime, whatever the form of prediction
suggested, there will be approximation, and room for
possible debate between proponents and opponents of
developments. Those who have access to expert opinion will
be in a stronger position unless effort is made to set up
shared databases that all can access freely.
B.66 The main conclusions of this review are that:
- Data for analysing populations within catchments
according to travel times are available for certain
areas to a high degree of accuracy using
GIS sources linked to population
data. Outside major urban areas the information,
especially with regard to public transport, may be more
difficult to find.
- For rural areas access by non-car modes may be
simple to calculate without data sources other than
maps, and bus timetables. In between the larger urban
areas and rural areas, and for smaller developments in
the larger urban areas, data for complex analyses may
be difficult to obtain, or may be too costly for
smaller developers to gain access to.
- Data on travel behaviour from which modal split
predictions might be made is good at the national
level, but only at the level of trip making for
different journey purposes. For journeys by non-car
modes to specific developments (especially 'new types'
of development such as multiplex cinemas) data is
poor.
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