Abstract

The development of public transport networks in polycentric regions involves making complex trade-offs between extending network coverage, densifying local connections, offering improved connections between urban centers and increasing capacity on existing links. Moreover, different modalities might be suitable for each of these development decisions depending on their speed, capacity and cost function structure. The objective of this study is to identify the influence of polycentric configurations and their respective travel demand distributions on the emerging topology of the corresponding multi-modal public transport network using an iterative growth model. Since polycentricity comes in many forms, our experimental design considers four polycentric configurations inspired by the cases of London, Tokyo, the Flemish Diamond and the Rhine-Ruhr area.The results are analysed in terms of both the properties of the obtained network structure as well as the evolutionary path and the sensitivity of both to key model settings and design variables. We find that more uneven population distributions result with the construction of fewer links and consequently the less connected and shorter the network becomes. The network evolutionary path is marked by distinctive intra- and inter- agglomeration expansion, densification and bulking phases. While the costs associated with each investment are the same regardless of the moment at which the investment is made, the benefits are not. This path dependency means that the evolutionary path is characterized by the need to attain a critical mass to justify further developments.

Highlights

  • Consider the similarities and differences in the public transport network structure in Greater Tokyo as opposed to say the Randstad re­ gion in the Netherlands

  • We focus on the development of multi-modal public transport networks in the context of a polycentric urban region

  • The objective of this study is to identify the influence of polycentric configurations and their respective travel demand distributions on the emerging topology of the corresponding multi-modal public transport network

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Summary

Introduction

Consider the similarities and differences in the public transport network structure in Greater Tokyo as opposed to say the Randstad re­ gion in the Netherlands. The limited empirical evidence on the development of public transport networks in a monocentric context (Cats, 2017; Yang and Chen, 2018) indicates that those are characterized by transitioning from peripheral attachment to preferential attachment, i.e. from extension to densification Whether this holds for poly­ centric urban regions is likely to largely depend on the spatial. The objective of this study is to identify the influence of polycentric configurations and their respective travel demand distributions on the emerging topology of the corresponding multi-modal public transport network. To this end, we develop an iterative growth model to examine the evolution of multi-modal public transport networks under various polycentric spatial configurations. We conclude with a discussion of the key findings and suggestions for further research (Section 5)

Modelling framework
Initialisation phase
Trip generation and attraction
Evolution phase
Model output
Agglomeration prototypes
Population distribution
Public transport layers
Scenario analysis and implementation
Results
Network structure properties
Network evolutionary path
Conclusion
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