Book Creator

Urban

by Mr Bell

Cover

Loading...
Human Environments 4
Loading...
Loading...
URBAN

Higher Geography
Loading...
Loading...
URBAN
For Traffic and Housing in both Developed and Developing Countries:

1. Need for management of recent urban change

2. Management strategies employed

3. Impact of management strategies 
Case Studies:

Traffic in a Developed World City: Edinburgh
Traffic in a Developing World City: Beijing
Housing in a Developed World City: Glasgow: Dalmarnock
Housing in a Developing World City: Rio de Janeiro: Rocinha
1a. Need for Traffic Management: Edinburgh
There are 5 main factors to focus on in relation to improving Traffic Management:

Cost

Safety

Economy

Public Health

Built Environment
Cost
In Edinburgh itself, around £30,000 a day is spent on road and pavement improvements. More than 1m cars enter the city each week and the number is rising.

The City of Edinburgh Council's priorities include making the streets safer, protecting the environment and improving accessibility, as well as improving the quality and capacity of the road network. 
Safety
Priority for taxis, cyclists, public transport and emergency services.

A safer on-street environment for pedestrians.

Less air pollution on Princes Street and George Street, the primary shopping streets.
Economy
Traffic congestion is costing the UK economy more than £4.3bn a year, or £491 per car-commuting household, according to the survey by the Centre for Economics and Business Research and traffic information company Inrix.


More than £426m is wasted on fuel alone a year, the survey said.

The cost in terms of lost time is £2.7 bn. or £331 per commuter a year.

Hold-ups to business or freight vehicles amounts to £1.1bn annually being added to household costs.
PrevNext