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  2. Street hierarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_hierarchy

    Eventually, the street hierarchy was also adapted for industrial parks and commercial developments. Use of the street hierarchy is a nearly universal characteristic of the "edge city", a roughly post-1970 form of urban development exemplified by places such as Tysons Corner, Virginia, and Schaumburg, Illinois.

  3. Road hierarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_hierarchy

    Bundesautobahn 9 near by Garching bei Muenchen, Germany. At the top of the hierarchy in terms of traffic flow and speed are controlled-access highways; their defining characteristic is the control of access to and from the road, meaning that the road cannot be directly accessed from properties or other roads, but only from specific connector roads.

  4. Radburn design housing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radburn_design_housing

    A diagram showing the street network structure of Radburn and its nested hierarchy. (The shaded area was not built) Radburn design is an offshoot of American designs from the English 'garden city' movement and culminated in the design of the partly-built 1929 Radburn estate.

  5. Right-in/right-out - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right-in/right-out

    RIRO is an important tool of access management, itself an important component of transportation planning.A study applying access management guidelines to the redesign of Missouri Route 763 in Columbia, Missouri [4] illustrates how RIRO, combined with signalized intersections designed to permit U-turns, can accommodate high volumes of traffic with low delay and high safety.

  6. Outline of transportation planning - Wikipedia

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

    Hierarchy of roads; Isochrone map; Land-use forecasting; Local transport plan; New Approach to Appraisal; Permeability (spatial and transport planning) SmartCode; Traffic simulation; Transport economics; Transport engineering; Transport forecasting; Travel behavior; Trip generation; Trip distribution; Mode choice; Route assignment

  7. Settlement hierarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Settlement_hierarchy

    A settlement hierarchy is a way of arranging settlements into a hierarchy based upon their size. The term is used by landscape historians and in the National Curriculum [ 1 ] for England . The term is also used in the planning system for the UK and for some other countries such as Ireland, India, and Switzerland.

  8. Types of road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_road

    Asphalt road in Norway. A road is a thoroughfare, route, or way on land between two places that has been surfaced or otherwise improved to allow travel by foot or some form of conveyance, including a motor vehicle, cart, bicycle, or horse.

  9. Green transport hierarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_transport_hierarchy

    The green transport hierarchy (Canada), street user hierarchy (US), sustainable transport hierarchy (Wales), [1] urban transport hierarchy or road user hierarchy (Australia, UK) [2] is a hierarchy of modes of passenger transport prioritising green transport. [3] It is a concept used in transport reform groups worldwide [4] [5] and in policy ...