Abstract

The study of patterns of urban mobility is of utter importance for city growth projection and development planning. In this paper, we analyze the topological aspects of the street network of the coastal city of Cartagena de Indias employing graph theory and spatial syntax tools. We find that the resulting network can be understood on the basis of 400 years of the city’s history and its peripheral location that strongly influenced and shaped the growth of the city, and that the statistical properties of the network resemble those of self-organized cities. Moreover, we study the mobility through the network using a simple agent-based model that allows us to study the level of street congestion depending on the agents’ knowledge of the traffic while they travel through the network. We found that a purely shortest-path travel scheme is not an optimal strategy and that assigning small weights to traffic avoidance schemes increases the overall performance of the agents in terms of arrival success, occupancy of the streets, and traffic accumulation. Finally, we argue that localized congestion can be only partially ascribed to topological properties of the network and that it is important to consider the decision-making capability of the agents while moving through the network to explain the emergence of traffic congestion in the system.

Highlights

  • Urban mobility tends to be categorized as either daily mobility or occasional mobility, and in terms of its spatial nature, has two aspects: one is an appropriate or resolved process that is translated into effective or physical movement and the second is a potential process

  • The data was adapted from the GIS Data of Open Street Map (OSM) that included the length of streets and the coordinates of the intersections

  • Once we have described the topological features of the street network, we proceed to use this network to simulate traffic flow on it through an agent-based model and describe different scenarios arising from different agents’ behavior

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Summary

A Coastal City Case

Understanding Traffic Congestion via Network Analysis, Agent Modeling, and the Trajectory of Urban. Academic Editors: Rui Castanho, Ana Vulevic, Gualter Couto, Doctorado en Ciencia Regional: Empresa y Territorio (CREMTE), Universidad de Huelva, 21004 Huelva, Spain. Grupo de Modelado Computacional-Dinámica y Complejidad de Sistemas, Instituto de Matemáticas

Introduction
Case of Study
Network Analysis
Dynamics of Traffic Flow
Summary and Discussion
Limitations and Future Research
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