Transit Panel (Steven Brown) - ULI fall meeting - 102711

25
Transportation-Oriented Design The Case for Transportation-Oriented Design Best Practices using the 4D’s Vision LA

Transcript of Transit Panel (Steven Brown) - ULI fall meeting - 102711

Transportation-Oriented Design

• The Case for Transportation-Oriented Design• Best Practices using the 4D’s• Vision LA

A 20-Year Movement

Transportation-Oriented Design

Context-Sensitive Design

Transit-Oriented Design

New Urbanism

SmartGrowth

GHGReduction

TrafficCalming

SharedParking

Why Orient Around Transportation?

- It knits all our activities together:

Transportation is Integral

Photos courtesy of Urban Advantage

Consequences of Not Designing for Transportation

Traffic congestion Increased fuel consumption Reduced air quality Less livable communities Lower quality of life

Poor Transportation Orientation

Transportation-Oriented Attributes

Compact mixed-uses High density and diverse housing Pedestrian- and bicycle-oriented Interconnected multimodal street system Walkable destinations Maximize trip linking opportunities Synergy through mix of uses

- Diversity (Mixed Use)- Density- Design (functionality for peds, bikes, transit)- Destination (proximity of worthwhile places to go)

Promote the Four D’s

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

SuburbanCommunities

TOD Communities

Other

Walk

Bike

Transit

Auto Passenger

Auto Driver

7.73 tripsper day

6.50 tripsper day

Suburban vs. Transit Oriented Neighborhoods

TOD residents drive 10 miles per day less than suburban equivalent

Vision Los Angeles

Collaboration of LAEDC & EDF

Funding by B of A, Hewlett Foundation

Lead Consultant: Point C (David Grannis)

Fehr & Peers 11February 17, 2010

Denser & more diverse centers:

At existing activity centers & around transit stations (assume 2x density, 1.5 jobs/HH)

On corridors well served by transit (assume 1.5x existing density)

Land Use VisionGeneral Strategies

Fehr & Peers 12February 17, 2010

Land Use VisionPopulation Density—Existing

Fehr & Peers 13February 17, 2010

Land Use VisionPopulation Density—Vision Los Angeles

Fehr & Peers 14February 17, 2010

Land Use VisionEmployment Density—Existing

Fehr & Peers 15February 17, 2010

Land Use VisionEmployment Density—Vision Los Angeles

Fehr & Peers 16February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TransitGeneral Strategies

Reduced pricing (assume average fares cut in half)

Reduced headways (assume headways cut in half)

Fehr & Peers 17February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TransitFixed Guideway—Existing

Fehr & Peers 18February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TransitFixed Guideway—Vision Los Angeles

Fehr & Peers 19February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TransitRapid Bus—Existing

Fehr & Peers 20February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TransitRapid Bus—Planned & Vision Los Angeles

Fehr & Peers 21February 17, 2010

Employer Shuttles (e.g. Google Shuttle)

Expanded & New Area Shuttles (e.g. DASH)

Transportation Vision: TransitArea Shuttles

Fehr & Peers 22February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TransitArea Shuttles—Existing & Vision Los Angeles

Fehr & Peers 23February 17, 2010

Transportation Vision: TDMTargeted Employment Locations

Fehr & Peers 24February 17, 2010

Bike & Ped Enhancements More bike lanes Better facilities surrounding TOD’s

Congestion pricing and freight pricing (freeways) TDM in key employment centers Parking pricing at activity centers Car Sharing A better “operating system”

Complimentary Strategies

May 13, 2010 25

Travel ResultsCompared to Baseline

458,500 more daily transit boardings 682,000 Fewer Daily SOV Auto Trips

Equivalent to 254,000 cars off the road 5.1% decline in VMT per Capita 7,700 fewer accidents annually $270.3 Million in annual time saved $42.9 Million saved in annual fuel costs

BackgroundApproach Results Conclusion