Friday Transportation Seminar: FHWA Guidebook for Measuring Multimodal Network Connectivity

DATE: 
Friday, April 20, 2018, 12:00pm to 1:00pm PDT
SPEAKERS: 
Joe Broach, Portland State University
COST: 
Free
LOCATION: 
Karl Miller Center at PSU, 615 SW Harrison St., Room 465
CREDIT: 
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

Miss the presentation or want a look back?

OVERVIEW

Joe Broach, one of the co-authors on FHWA's newest guide on Measuring Multimodal Network Connectivity, presents some of the principles and case studies used in this guide. See below for an excerpt from Chapter One:

In 2016 the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) published a Guidebook for Developing Pedestrian and Bicycle Performance Measures that presents methods for measuring walking and bicycling performance and activities and embedding them into the transportation planning and decisionmaking process (U.S. Department of Transportation 2016). Building on the 2016 guidebook, this resource focuses on pedestrian and bicycle network connectivity and provides information on incorporating connectivity measures into state, metropolitan, and local transportation planning processes.

Connectivity measures can help transportation practitioners identify high priority network gaps, implement cost-effective solutions that address multiple needs, optimize potential co-benefits, and measure the long-term impacts of strategic pedestrian and bicycle investments on goals such as improving safety, system efficiency, network performance, and access to key destinations. Toward that end, this resource should be used in conjunction with self-evaluation and transition plans to evaluate needs for pedestrians with disabilities.

What Is Multimodal Network Connectivity?
Connectivity is one of several concepts commonly used in transportation performance measurement to describe the ease with which people can travel across the transportation system. At its simplest level, network connectivity addresses the question, "Can I get where I want to go easily and safely?" Multimodal network connectivity adds the dimension of travel choices to the picture: "Can I get where I want to go easily and safely in whatever way I choose-for example, walking, bicycling, using transit, or driving?" A connected multimodal network allows people to travel by whatever mode they choose, including people who do not drive or do not have access to a motor vehicle.

Key Components of Pedestrian and Bicycle Network Connectivity
This guidebook outlines five core components of multimodal network connectivity, as listed below, with a focus on pedestrians and bicyclists. While these components are all related, the distinctions between them provide a framework for selecting connectivity measures that address specific questions. The guidebook describes analysis methods and supporting measures associated with each of these components:

  • Network completeness - How much of the transportation network is available to bicyclists and pedestrians?
  • Network density - How dense are the available links and nodes of the bicycle and pedestrian network?
  • Route directness - How far out of their way do users have to travel to find a facility they can or want to use? 
  • Access to destinations - What destinations can be reached using the transportation network? 
  • Network quality - How does the network support users of varying levels of experience, ages, abilities, and comfort with bicycling or walking?
THE SPEAKER

Joseph Broach, Portland State University

Joseph Broach is a ​Research Associate with the Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) and an Instructor in the School of Urban Studies and Planning at Portland State University. H​is work primarily ​focuses ​on transportation data​, behavior,​ and modeling, and ​he ​helped design the ​Portland region's ​next-generation bicycle model in conjunction with Metro.​

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

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