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DOI:10.1068/a3592
Abstract. The fundamental dilemma in attempts to make urban development less dependent upon
mobility by car is the inability of alternatives to match the quality of accessibility provided by private
motorized transport. Failure to recognize this means that bringing about environmentally more
sustainable urban mobility patterns is only possible at economic, social, and political costs that are
unacceptable in most societies. In this paper we identify and discuss ways out of this dilemma, in the
form of solutions that pursue the goal of increasing both sustainability and accessibility. We start by
contending that what people ask is not a generic mobility, but rather opportunities to participate in
spatially disjointed activities. Accordingly, accessibility should be defined as the amount and the
diversity of `spatial opportunities' that can be reached within a certain amount of time. Solutions to
the accessibility ^ sustainability dilemma building upon this perspective (that is, planning concepts,
policy measures) have been the object of recent research at the Universiteit van Amsterdam and are
discussed and we look for, and find, evidence of the feasibility of these solutions in the actual trends
in the Amsterdam urban region. Some policy implications of the findings are discussed.
1 Introduction
Transport is a central aspect of the sustainable urban development debate. Urban trans-
port has major impacts on the local (and the global) environment, as well as on the
quality of life in, and the economic performance of, cities. Because so many things
come together when dealing with urban transport, the subject is highly complex. Direct
measures such as energy use, CO2 emissions, air pollution, traffic noise, and the like
would be the best indicators of the environmental impact of urban transport. However,
these measures are rarely available; hence, the `per capita distance traveled by car' is
the most widely accepted (un)sustainability indicator of urban transport (Wegener
and Fu«rst, 1999). This indicator is highly correlated with the aforementioned negative
environmental impacts, and also with other sustainability aspects (see, for instance,
Newman and Kenworthy, 1999). In a wider perspective, in which economic and social
issues are also considered, Newman and Kenworthy (1991) define the unsustainability of
current urban transport patterns as `automobile dependence'. From this perspective, the
challenge for sustainable urban transport and land-use planning becomes that of achiev-
ing urban development with no, or at any rate with as little as possible, increase in car
use.
There is, however, a fundamental dilemma when trying to make urban develop-
ment less dependent on the car: the inability of most alternatives to match the quality
of accessibility provided by private motorized transport. Failing to recognize this means
that bringing about more sustainable urban mobility patterns is only possible at
economic, social, and political costs that are unacceptable in most societies. Our goal
in this paper is the identification and discussion of ways out of this dilemma, in the form
of solutions that pursue the goal of increasing both sustainability and accessibility. Our
starting point is the observation that what people ask is not so much a generic mobility
but, rather, opportunities to participate in spatially disjointed activities. Solutions to the
576 L Bertolini, F le Clercq
accessibility ^ sustainability dilemma building upon this perspective are the object
of current research at the Universiteit van Amsterdam and are discussed in the first
part of the paper. We build upon these findings to sketch an environmentally more
sustainableöbut economically no less competitive, and socially and politically no less
acceptable övision for the integration of sustainable transport and land-use patterns in
urban development strategies. In the second part of the paper we look for, and find,
evidence of the feasibility of these solutions in the current mobility and activity trends
in the Amsterdam urban region. We then introduce some policy implications of these
findings.
(a) For the most part people travel not just for the sake of it, but in order to participate
in spatially disjointed activities (for example, living, working, shopping, visiting in
different places).
(b) People want to have a choice among as large a number and as diverse a range of
activities as possible.
(c) Travel costs, and particularly travel time rather than travel distance, set a limit to
these possibilities (in the form of total daily travel-time budgets, travel-to-work time
budgets, etc).
According to these assumptions, accessibility can be defined as `the number and
the diversity of places of activity that can be reached within a given time limit'. The
goal of maximizing the synergy between sustainability and accessibility can be
expressed as the goal of:
Developing conditions for as large as possible a share of the more environmentally
friendly modes in urban mobility, while at the same time maintaining, and possibly
increasing, the amount and the diversity of activity places that can be reached
within an acceptable travel time.
Develop multifunctional
without travel homes and workplaces
and especially the flexibility of transit (as with light rail systems), stimulating the
introduction of cleaner engine technologies and the more efficient use of the car
(for example, through car-pooling or car-sharing programs). An accompanying,
highly effective, transport-policy measure is, of course, in all cases the (selective)
discouragement of car use: for instance, through parking regulations, road pricing,
or physical design. Examples of land-use policy implications include the development
of multifunctional homes and workplaces, for example, facilitating teleworking; the
development of multifunctional neighborhoods allowing walking or cycling to work-
places, shops, or other facilities; and orientating the spatial development of urban
regions to public transport networks, as in `transit-oriented development' (Calthorpe,
1993; Cervero, 1998).
A variety of transport and land-use packages can be derived from these policy
implications. Local conditions will largely determine which are the most effective.
However, some guiding principles can be identified and are introduced below.(1) It is
important to underline that these should by no means be seen as blueprints, but rather
as visualizations of potential directions. Furthermore, the focus on the supply side of
transport and land-use measures should not obscure the fact that demand-management
measures, such as pricing of car use, are also an essential part of successful strategies
(see, among others, Bertolini et al, 2000; Wegener and Fu« rst, 1999).
The central idea informing the following is that the quality of the accessibility of a
given location has to be matched by the sort of activity to be located there, exploiting
all sorts of transport modes. We define this philosophy as `multimodal urban ^ regional
development'. In this perspective, two dimensions are especially important: the spatial
reach of an activity or function (or its market or `catchment' area, expressed, for
example, in kilometers) and its intensity of use (which may be expressed as inhabitants,
workers, and/or visitors per unit of space and/or time). Given these two dimensions,
Activity feature:
spatial reach
Transport feature:
speed
Transit
Car environments
environments
Activity feature:
intensity of use
Transport features:
capacity (increasing),
flexibility (decreasing)
Figure 2. Principles of multimodal urban ^ regional development: conceptual scheme.
(1)
Analogous principles have been and are being introduced, discussed, and elaborated in an
evolving body of literature. See, for instance, Bertolini, 1999; Bertolini and Dijst, 2003; Breheny
and Rookwood, 1993; Calthorpe, 1993; Cervero, 1998; Goudappel Coffeng, 1999a; Hall and Ward,
1998; le Clercq and de Vries, 2000; Meijers, 2000; Ministerie van V&W, 1995; Newman and
Kenworthy, 1999; VHP and Goudappel Coffeng, 1999.
Urban development without more mobility by car? 579
the features (for example, speed, flexibility, capacity) of the available transport modes
determine the preferred location of an activity, as illustrated in figure 2. At and around
transit nodes belong activities with a spatial reach matching the scale of operation (and
thus the speed) of the transit system and a high intensity of use (for example, concen-
trations of office, leisure, shopping). Acceptable travel times to and from the transit
node determine the extent of the `nodal areas' where origins (homes) and destinations
(work, free-time), respectively, are located. Cycling and walking are the most suitable
travel modes for activities with a low spatial reach (for example, use of local services,
neighborhood visits). Crucially, only activities with middle to high spatial reach and
low intensity of use (for example, living, working, or recreating in low densities) are
best served by the car system. This is because in these cases only the speed and the
flexibility of the car cannot be matched by the alternatives.
The diagram in figure 2 can be usefully employed to characterize existing urban
systems. Los Angeles, for instance, is a city where most activity and mobility patterns
fall into the `car environment' type; Hong Kong can be best characterized as a `transit
environment'; and many European historic city centers still function as `walking and
cycling environments'. The diagram can, however, also be used in a more normative
way, and this is the central thesis of this paper: it is a combination of environments
exploiting the specificities of each that allows the highest accessibility with the lowest
dependence on the car, or `urban development without more mobility by car'. In other
words, where transport modes other than the car are or can be a competitive way of
linking spatially disjointed activities, transport, land use, and other policy measures
should enhance rather than frustrate this possibility.
The essential elements of the ensuing multimodal urban ^ regional morphology are
illustrated in figure 3, where a schematic transport infrastructure network determines the
Regional reach,
Urban reach
high intensity of use
high intensity
of use
Regional reach,
lower intensity
of use (car)
Interregional reach,
Local reach high intensity of use
(walk, cycle)
Urban transit
(mean distance 3 km)
Origins (homes)
Regional transit
(mean distance 30 km)
Interregional transit Destinations (workplaces,
(mean distance 300 km) other facilities)
Highway
location of activities according to their spatial reach and intensity of use, following the
criteria identified in figure 2. Activities with high spatial reach and high intensity of use
are around transit nodes; activities with low spatial reach are in walking and cycling
environments; and only activities with middle to high spatial reach and low intensity of
use are dependent on the use of the car. In practice, either the spatial pattern of activities
or the pattern of the transport infrastructure could be the starting point of development.
In the following sections we discuss developments in the Amsterdam urban region in
the Netherlands in order to underpin empirically the strategy being suggested here.
In section 4 we introduce the region and its historical and current transport and land-
use patterns. In section 5 we show some evidence of `urban development without more
mobility by car' at the level of the whole urban region. In section 6 we extend the
analysis to local components of the region following the environment types identified in
figures 2 and 3.
0 5 10 km
accompanied by the concentration of large offices and urban facilities alongside the
newly constructed tangential infrastructure, particularly to the south of the core city (in
locations such as Zuid and Bijlmer, also known as the `Zuidas', or `South Axis'). Current
trends in the spatial distribution of activities in the city are a vivid example of how the
growing differentiation in accessibility resulting from the evolution of the transport
infrastructure has become an essential factor in shaping the transformation of the form
and the use of the urban space. Intriguingly, many of the ideal typical combinations
identified in section 3 of this paper are matched by these developments, and similar
trends can be observed in smaller cities in the region.
As well as the historic city center (around Central Station, or CS in figure 4), which
still enjoys the best accessibility by transit, several nodes have emerged which typically
combine excellent accessibility both by public and by private transport. The most
important of these new nodes is the international airport of Schiphol, which provides
a unique combination of intercontinental air links and direct connection to the regional
and national motorway and railway networks. The airport area has become the focus
of a rich and diverse concentration of activities (including office, conference, hotel,
retail, and logistics). Office rents there are the highest in the country and the employ-
ment baseöat around 50 000öis comparable with that in the historic city center.
Other older and newer nodes are also increasingly the focus of specific concentrations.
Large-scale office complexes, and financial and business services in particular, have been
clustering around the railway stations of Sloterdijk (for example, Teleport), Lelylaan
(World Fashion Centre), Amstel (Philips, Worldcom), Zuid (World Trade Center, the
ABN ^ AMRO and ING banks). The area between Bijlmer station and the A2 motorway
appears to be a preferred location for combined warehouse and office complexes,
582 L Bertolini, F le Clercq
120
Growth
100
Figure 5. Amsterdam region: trends in the growth of population, jobs, and trips by mode
between 1991 and 1998 (1991 100; walking not included) (source: Dienst Infrastructuur,
Verkeer en Vervoer, 2000).
100
23 23
80
23 25
60
Split (%)
54 52
40
20
0
1990 1995 2000
Car Public transport Bicycle
Figure 6. Amsterdam region: modal split trends between 1991 and 1998 (walking not included)
(source: Dienst Infrastructuur, Verkeer en Vervoer, 2000).
realization of such potential. The growing scale of operation of the system may also
partly explain the relative stagnation of bicycle use in the region.
All in all, the pattern in the Amsterdam region seems to suggest that the realization
of the specific potential of all sorts of mobility environmentsöcar, transit, and walking
and cycling environmentsöis a workable strategy which combines both accessibility
(indirectly documented by the continuing growth in population and jobs) and sustain-
ability (the relatively high share of environmentally friendly modes). As the qualitative
description of trends in the spatial distribution of activities suggests, there appears in
Amsterdam to be a high degree of (potential) complementarity between the different
mobility environments. In the next section we explore this claim in some detail.
area in the west of the Netherlands of which the Amsterdam urban region is a major
component. The second set of data is focused on trends in different parts of Amsterdam.
The third study is focused on a particularly interesting section of the urban region
and the city as typified in figure 4: the development corridor connecting some of the
major, most dynamic, subcenters ömost notably including the Zuidas (South Axis).
6.2 Emerging modal specialization in the Randstad
Table 1 documents transport-mode trends, between 1986/87 and 1997 for a range of
spatial relationships in the Randstad. For this purpose the Randstad has been divided
into three area types: large cities, their agglomerations, and the rest (see figure 7). In
the Amsterdam urban region, the large-city area type corresponds with the municipal
Table 1. Randstad, modal split of all trips (other than walking) (source: Goudappel Coffeng,
1999b).
Type of As % of all trips Modal split 1986/87 (%) Modal split 1997 (%)
relationshipa b
1986/87 1997 car train btm bicycle car train btmb bicycle
within lg 36.7 33.3 49.2 0.5 14.5 35.8 42.6 0.6 11.9 44.9
lg ± owa 6.5 6.8 66.1 4.7 13.8 15.4 66.6 5.1 12.1 16.2
lg ± lg 2.2 2.9 67.3 26.6 4.6 1.6 56.0 38.9 3.6 1.6
lg ± ota 1.3 1.8 81.2 10.8 2.2 5.8 74.8 18.2 3.1 3.9
lg ± r 8.8 9.1 71.2 9.1 10.1 9.6 71.3 11.7 8.7 8.3
within a 12.7 12.8 52.9 0.1 2.6 44.1 51.2 0.2 1.9 46.7
a±r 3.8 4.6 80.1 3.0 4.4 12.6 80.5 3.5 3.3 12.6
within r 27.9 28.6 54.4 0.4 1.7 43.5 55.0 0.6 0.9 43.6
Total 100.0 100.0 56.2 2.3 8.2 33.4 54.2 3.4 6.4 36.0
a lgÐlarge city; aÐagglomeration; owaÐown agglomeration; otaÐother agglomeration;
rÐrest of Randstad.
b btmÐbus, tram, metro.
Public 25 21 27 24 25 25 28 26 25
transport
Bicycle 42 53 32 40 28 22 30 32 35
Car 33 27 40 36 47 53 42 42 40
586 L Bertolini, F le Clercq
Prewar city
Postwar city
0 5 10 km
in the same period, resulting in a 31% growth of the per capita distance traveled by car
between 1990 and 1997 (all data from Dienst Infrastructuur, Verkeer en Vervoer, 1999b).
This takes us back to the policy challenges identified in the preceding section: the need
to significantly increase the share of public transport in the longer trips, or to limit the
growth of average distances through land-use measures (or a combination of the two).
As far as the limitation of growth of average distances is concerned, modal trends in
the prewar city are particularly interesting. Here, much infill development has taken
place in the period under scrutiny. There is currently a shift of focus of this urban
renewal effort (densification, diversification) to the postwar neighborhoods which
could increase the scope for cycling and walking there as well. As far as the first
challenge is concernedöthe potential role of public transportöthe analysis of modal
choice before and after opening of the Ring Line metro in the next section also
provides some interesting clues.
6.4 Mobility trends before and after opening of the Ring Line metro
Table 3 documents trends in the modal split of people working within the direct area of
influence of the Ring Line metro (see figure 9), before and after its opening in 1997. This
Table 3. Modal choice (excluding walking) of people working in the area of influence of the Ring
Line metro, before and after its opening (source: Dienst Infrastructuur, Verkeer en Vervoer, 2001).
Home to work 47 43 10 40 51 9
Business 62 25 13 53 36 11
Urban development without more mobility by car? 587
0 2.5 5 km
7 Conclusions
In the first part of this paper, a transport and land-use strategy linking the improve-
ment of sustainability and of accessibility was sketched. In the second part, the
588 L Bertolini, F le Clercq
example of the Amsterdam urban region was used to show that this is a workable
strategy. A detailed discussion of the role of specific policy measures, as opposed to
autonomous developments, in this evolution, although important, falls outside the
scope of this paper (for this, see le Clercq and Bertolini, 2003). However, figure 1 can
be usefully referred to in order to mention some of the main policy elements that have
contributed to the trends described above. At the level of cycling and walking environ-
ments, an essential measure has been the widespread development of dedicated, most
notably bicycle, infrastructure on the transport side, matched on the land-use side by
the renewal of historic neighborhoods and the development of new mixed-use neigh-
borhoods. As far as transit environments are concerned, substantial investment in
upgrading and expanding train (for example, the new tangential links) and metro
infrastructure (particularly the Ring Line) are important transport-policy elements.
Their impact has been positively reinforced by a land-use policy seeking the concen-
tration of large-scale offices and regional facilities around public transportation nodes.
In addition, the most significant policy dealing with car environments has been the
regulation of parking allowance, which has proved an invaluable tool in managing
the accessibility of locations, most notably within the municipality of Amsterdam.
With the help of figure 1, some of the upcoming challenges can be identified. At the
level of `without travel' mobility environmentsöhardly addressed by policy up to
nowöit could prove important to broaden the possibilities for teleworking and other
teleactivities by providing larger housing and perhaps also adjoining working space
and/or allowing for more flexible use. Increasingly, most businesses start in the home
but are soon constrained by space limitations. Investment in walking and cycling
infrastructure is still needed, but the continued success of walking and cycling environ-
ments also depends on the extent to which new and existing residential areas are able
to develop a critical mass of destinations (such as workplaces and facilities) within
short distances. As already mentioned, an essential condition for the support of transit
environments is that of the development of a comprehensive regional transit network
or, more precisely, making the current fragments function in a more integrated fashion.
The success of transit environments will, however, largely depend on land-use trends
and policies. The concentration around multimodal nodes of large-scale offices and
regional facilities remains crucial in this respect. Some of the major upcoming
challenges concern car environments, where accessibility management of the sort
implemented through parking regulations in the core city needs to be gradually
extended to the whole region and connected to measures to manage capacity on the
motorway network, including downgrading and upgrading of sections of the systems,
road pricing, and possibly a few new strategic links. Perhaps the main problem here is
that of the poor political acceptability of many such measures.
In more general terms, and perhaps most importantly, the fine-tuning of the
demand for and the supply of accessibility should become a more explicit goal of
transport and land-use planning than now is the case. If this does not happen,
upcoming challenges risk going unnoticed, and the positive results of past years may
be put at risk. In cities around the world the question of how to allow for a sustainable
and yet accessible urban system is a major issue. The specific answers to this question
need, of course, to be found in each local context. Other cities may be already more
successful than Amsterdam in this. However, in this paper we hope to have made at
least two things clear. The first is that there is much to be gained by striving for
synergy rather than competition in the contribution of different transport modes,
including nonmotorized ones, to enhancing accessibility. The second is that a condition
essential to the achievement of such synergy is the fine-tuning of the supply of mobility,
as provided by the transport system, and the demand for mobility, as originated by
Urban development without more mobility by car? 589
different land-use patterns. The approach presented in this paper may offer a useful
way to conceptualize this task as well as offering potential solutions.
Acknowledgements. We gratefully acknowledge the Ministry of Economic Affairs of the Netherlands
for financing through the Netherlands Agency for Energy and the Environment (NOVEM) this
research project. NOVEM has also provided useful feedback.
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