Abstract

Statistical models that can generate a road-traffic noise map for a city or area where only elementary urban design factors are determined, and where no concrete urban morphology, including buildings and roads, is given, can provide basic but essential information for developing a quiet and sustainable city. Long-term cost-effective measures for a quiet urban area can be considered at early city planning stages by using the statistical road-traffic noise map. An artificial neural network (ANN) and an ordinary least squares (OLS) model were developed by utilizing data on urban form indicators, based on a 3D urban model and road-traffic noise levels from a normal noise map of city A (Gwangju). The developed ANN and OLS models were applied to city B (Cheongju), and the resultant statistical noise map of city B was compared to an existing normal road-traffic noise map of city B. The urban form indicators that showed multi-collinearity were excluded by the OLS model, and among the remaining urban forms, road-related urban form indicators such as traffic volume and road area density were found to be important variables to predict the road-traffic noise level and to design a quiet city. Comparisons of the statistical ANN and OLS noise maps with the normal noise map showed that the OLS model tends to under-estimate road-traffic noise levels, and the ANN model tends to over-estimate them.

Highlights

  • Road, railway, and air-traffic networks are essential for the sustainable development of a city [1,2], but transport networks can generate undesirable by-products including fine dust and noise [3], affecting the quality of life and health of inhabitants [4,5]

  • The results showed that ground space index, floor space index, traffic volume, speed, road area density, and fraction of industrial area had statistically significant direct and indirect impacts on road-traffic noise levels

  • The artificial neural network (ANN) and ordinary least squares (OLS) models were fitted by using the dataset of Gwangju

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Summary

Introduction

Road-, railway-, and air-traffic networks are essential for the sustainable development of a city [1,2], but transport networks can generate undesirable by-products including fine dust and noise [3], affecting the quality of life and health of inhabitants [4,5]. The targets of noise maps include major roads [7], railways [8], airports [9,10], and ports [11]. Similar to the EU, the Republic of Korea (South Korea) mandates noise mapping in large cities, and updates every five years [12].

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