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  2. Transportation planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_planning

    Transportation planning is the process of defining future policies, goals, investments, and spatial planning designs to prepare for future needs to move people and goods to destinations. As practiced today, it is a collaborative process that incorporates the input of many stakeholders including various government agencies, the public and ...

  3. Public transport planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_transport_planning

    It is a hybrid discipline involving aspects of transport engineering and traditional urban planning. [2] Indeed, many transit planners find themselves involved in discourse with urban-land-use issues such as transit-oriented development. Transit planners are responsible for developing routes and networks of routes for urban transit systems.

  4. Outline of transportation planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_transportation...

    The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to transportation planning. Transportation planningprocess of defining future policies, goals, investments, and spatial planning designs to prepare for future needs to move people and goods to destinations.

  5. Transit-oriented development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transit-oriented_development

    Transit Oriented Development. Many of the new towns created after World War II in Japan, Sweden, and France have many of the characteristics of TOD communities. In a sense, nearly all communities built on reclaimed land in the Netherlands or as exurban developments in Denmark have had the local equivalent of TOD principles integrated in their planning, including the promotion of bicycles for ...

  6. Trip distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trip_distribution

    All trips have an origin and destination and these are considered at the trip distribution stage. Trip distribution (or destination choice or zonal interchange analysis) is the second component (after trip generation, but before mode choice and route assignment) in the traditional four-step transportation forecasting model.

  7. Passengers per hour per direction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passengers_per_hour_per...

    Three parallel escalators; the direction of the middle escalator can be changed to double capacity in one direction (↑↑↓ or ↑↓↓).. Many public transport systems handle a high directional flow of passengers— often traveling to work in a city in the morning rush hour and away from the said city in the late afternoon.

  8. Public transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_transport

    Public transport (also known as public transportation, public transit, mass transit, or simply transit) is a system of transport for passengers by group travel systems available for use by the general public unlike private transport, typically managed on a schedule, operated on established routes, and that may charge a posted fee for each trip.

  9. Trip generation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trip_generation

    Trip generation is the first step in the conventional four-step transportation forecasting process used for forecasting travel demands. It predicts the number of trips originating in or destined for a particular traffic analysis zone (TAZ). [1]