Date of Award

2012

Publication Type

Master Thesis

Degree Name

M.A.Sc.

Department

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Supervisor

Hanna Maoh

Rights

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Abstract

The overall objective of this research is to examine the long-term impacts of alternative urban form scenarios on the sustainability of the transportation system using the Windsor CMA as a case study. The specific objectives of this research work are as follows: 1. Design several land use scenarios to identify potentially sustainable urban forms in the study area, 2. Predict the population and employment distributions associated with the designed land use scenarios for the period 2011 to 2031, 3. Model the scenarios from objectives 1 and 2 using traffic assignment and emission simulation software to obtain traffic and environmental impacts, and 4. Conduct a comparative analysis across scenarios to provide insights that could help inform the planning process in the studied city. The first part of the modeling exercise is to predict and distribute the population and employment growth in the Windsor CMA for four scenarios (status-quo, compact, sprawl and multinucleated scenarios). Multinomial Logit Modeling (MNL) and Multi-Criteria Evaluation (MCE) techniques were used to handle the land use development scenarios. The second part of this thesis is focused on examining the traffic performance under different urban form scenarios. More specifically, Vehicle Kilometers Traveled (VKT), Vehicle Minutes Traveled (VMT), energy consumption and harmful gas emissions (e.g. HC, CO and NOx) were calculated and analyzed. Results indicate that the sprawl pattern would contribute to or result in a non-sustainable future in the Windsor CMA. In comparison, compact development results in lower VKT, VMT and emissions over time. Consequently, the future planning process in the region could benefit from promoting a more compact urban form since the latter is likely to lead to a more sustainable urban future.

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