Does Density Foster Shorter Public Transport Networks? A Network Expansion Simulation Approach

Author:

Jacobs-Crisioni Chris12,Dijkstra Lewis2ORCID,Kučas Andrius2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bureau Jacobs-Crisioni, 1069 CD Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Territorial Development Unit, Directorate for a Fair and Sustainable Economy, Joint Research Centre, European Commission, 21027 Ispra, Italy

Abstract

One argument for containing urban densities is that cities need a critical population density to sustain sufficiently available public transportation. However, the question of whether denser cities foster shorter public transport networks empirically is problematic because real-world transport nets are a product of many additional factors presumably not related to urban form. This paper adopts a network expansion simulation approach to generate and analyze counterfactual data on network lengths for 36 world cities, in which all networks are generated with similar expansion restrictions and objectives. Denser cities are found to have shorter simulated public transport networks, regardless of the tested model parameters. This provides additional proof that densities are needed to facilitate the provision of proximate public transport infrastructure, with potentially self-reinforcing effects.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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