Abstract

If an infrastructure intervention, such as the conversion of a car lane into a dedicated bus lane, decreases automobile accessibility but increases transit accessibility, what is the overall effect on accessibility? To date, no methods have been proposed to evaluate this question. Accessibility research in the transportation and land-use literature has been dominated by unimodal and comparative approaches to analyzing accessibility. Little attention has been paid to quantifying multimodal accessibility or to the interactions between modes, and how these might affect overall accessibility. Moreover, the use of targets for accessibility in planning has been largely ignored. Particularly important to the evaluation of transportation planning outcomes is accessibility to employment, as this is a key element and predictor of urban economic prosperity. This study, building on the work of Alain Bertaud, proposed the multimodal accessibility target or MAT. The MAT provides a more accurate picture of overall (across mode) accessibility to jobs in a city, and can be used to evaluate transportation infrastructure investments. It also provides a target for accessibility that is an easily interpretable indicator that can serve as a goal in accessibility-based transportation planning. A case study of the proposed implementation of a bus rapid transit (BRT) system in Montreal, Canada was used as an empirical example of the use of the MAT. In the case study, predicted multimodal accessibility to employment in the study area (and thereby the MAT) was found to increase with BRT compared with the base case scenario.

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