CMP Toolkit
CMP Toolkit
TOOLKIT - OVERVIEW
1
GUIDELINES AND TOOLKIT
PREVIEW OF CMP
CMP – TOOLKIT, 2008? DETERMINISTIC FORECASTING APPROACH
Program
Land Use/ Transport TRANSPORT
Measures
PLANNING STUDIO
SURVEYS FOR CMP
PREPARATION
For the preparation of Comprehensive Mobility Plan, the COMPREHENSIVE
required information will be collected and compiled through MOBILITY PLAN
primary surveys and secondary sources as per the formats.
Road Inventory Freight Survey
Junction Inventory Traffic Safety
Traffic Volume Count Household Survey
Parking Survey Energy Consumption in Transport: City level
Speed & Delay Survey Vehicle Inventory –Registered Vehicles at City
Inventory for Cycle Rickshaws and Autos Vehicle Survey at Petrol Pump SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
Inventory for Public Transport Air Quality levels – Secondary Data
ARCHITECTURE,
Land use Survey along PT Corridor (BRT / Metro)
VIJAYAWADA
DETAILED TASK DESCRIPTIONS 03
TASK 1 Defining Scope of the CMP
SECTION I
TASK 2 Data Collection and Analysis of the Existing Urban Transport Environment SECTION II
TASK 1
TASK 3 Development of Business as Usual (BAU) Scenario TASK 2
TASK 3
TASK 4 Development of Sustainable Urban Transport Scenarios TASK 4
TASK 5
TASK 5 Development of Urban Mobility Plan TASK 6
SECTION III
TASK 6 Preparation of the Implementation Program SECTION IV
OVERALL MODELLING FRAMEWORK FOR CMP TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
INTRODUCTION
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
COMPREHENSIVE
PLANNING AREA
MOBILITY PLAN
Task 2.1 Review of the City Profile • Rivers, lakes, canals, railway lines may be
It is important to study the present socio-economic profile and trends over a period of Physical barriers considered for delineating TAZ
time. The data must be collected from primary or secondary sources. The data SECTION I
requirements for the city profile in CMP is given in below table. Road network & PT • The zone size would also get affected by the
network in the road and PT network in the study area. SECTION II
Data required study area TASK 1
Description Source for Primary Data Data level
• Major centres like industrial areas or major
TASK 2
Location Geographical location Master plans of the city and City wide Homogeneity in land residential pockets should be considered as a TASK 3
region if available/ CDP use single zone.
TASK 4
Master plan of the city and
Total land area region City wide • Regional / city level like railway station, sports TASK 5
Special traffic complexes / major freight centres etc. might
Master plan of the city and generators be considered as separate zones. TASK 6
Land ared Growth pattern City wide
region SECTION III
Zone sizes SECTION IV
Identification of notified areas Master plan of the city and City wide
region
Regional The zone sizes should be as uniform as possible TOOLKIT FOR
Road & Rail Network Master plan/CDP City wide If some zones are much bigger than others, a significant
linkages COMPREHENSIVE
number of trips will be made within the zone (intra-zonal MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
Population growth trends by
census wards or enumeration Census City wide trips) that will not reflect on the network.
Generally, Data Collection and Analysis
blocks of the Existing Urban
Demography • population of 1,000 – 3,000 is optimum for a small
Number and size of house Transport and Environment
hold Census City wide area
• population of 5,000 – 10,000 is optimum for a large DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
Age-sex pyramid Census City wide JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
area
Population by income / If city level GIS data available or If the study area includes outskirts and peripheral areas VALLIKANNU |
Socio- expenditure on transport at enumeration block data of the City wide
TAZ or ward level census and primary surveys around the city which are not fully developed, these may
economic
data Vehicle ownership (including RTO, other local agencies /
be merged with the existing administrative zones at TRANSPORT
City wide which socio-economic, censés, etc. data Is available. PLANNING STUDIO
bicycles) by social group primary surveys
Task 2.2 Delineation of Traffic Analysis Zones Task 2.3 Review of Land Use Pattern and
For the purpose of analysis and development of travel demand forecasting model, the Population Density COMPREHENSIVE
study area is required to be subdivided into smaller areas known as Traffic Analysis Once the zoning is done, the next step is the collection of MOBILITY PLAN
Zones (TAZs). the data. While collecting the data the slums are
• Internal Zones :- The zones inside the planning/study area.
considered as part of residential land use. And the
• External Zones :- The zones outside the planning/study area.
residential land use will have the income groups marked
These zones help analyse trip interactions between internal-internal, internal-external, properly. This data can be collected from the household
external-external and external-internal. survey. If the household survey data is not available then
The Basis of Zoning disaggregation of the residential land use can be done by SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
TAZs are delineated taking into account various factors such as administrative the following formula, ARCHITECTURE,
boundaries, physical barriers like water bodies, railway lines, highways and Per capita floor area = household area_________ VIJAYAWADA
homogeneous land uses.
06
Land Use Data Existing Transport Systems
CDP or master plans are the prime data sources for reviewing existing land-use patterns
An alternative source for land use information collected by the National Urban
Information System (NUIS)7
In cities where NUIS data is not available, CDPs or Master Plans can be used in
conjunction with property tax data, which is available from the respective municipal SECTION I
corporation. SECTION II
TASK 1
After obtaining the land use data it need to be analysed for land/floor area TASK 2
consumption per land use in each TAZ which indicates the percentage of land under TASK 3
each land use.
TASK 4
And the an indicator which influence the distance travel for obligatory activities like
shopping, recreation etc. is collected by the household survey. (The survey format are TASK 5
given in CMP toolkit reviserd-2014 – Annexure 1 and 4) TASK 6
SECTION III
SECTION IV
Analysing Density
In addition to residential densities, job densities are studied and analysed using the TOOLKIT FOR
following formula. COMPREHENSIVE
No. of persons/job per unit area = Rj____ MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
ARj x AJj Data Collection and Analysis
Where, of the Existing Urban
Rj = no of residents in a zone Transport and Environment
ARj = area under residential purpose landuse in the zone DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
AJj = no.of jobs in the zone to the area under land uses that generate these jobs JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
respectively VALLIKANNU |
The next parameter to be analysed is the Floor space used per activity per unit area,
TRANSPORT
which is by
Floor space used per activity per unit area = No. of floor X land use (activity) PLANNING STUDIO
This indicator will help us in comparing the BAU development projection and COMPREHENSIVE
sustainable urban policy scenarios. MOBILITY PLAN
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
Data Collection and Analysis
of the Existing Urban
Transport and Environment
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
Data Collection and Analysis
of the Existing Urban
Ambient Air Quality Transport and Environment
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
The data related to ambient air quality is helpful for
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
understanding the impact of transport on air VALLIKANNU |
pollution. In some cities, the pollution control
department has installed measurement TRANSPORT
instruments in a few places within the city.
PLANNING STUDIO
However, data on ambient air quality is not
available for all cities, and in such cases the data of COMPREHENSIVE
cities of similar characteristics can be used. MOBILITY PLAN
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
Data Collection and Analysis
of the Existing Urban
Transport and Environment
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN
BUSINESS AS USUAL
SCENARIO
SOCIO ECONOMIC PROJECTION DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS Population projections for the city.
Along with family size, age group, gender proportion, rural-urban, rural-rural, urban- rural TRANSPORT
migration.
PLANNING STUDIO
COMPREHENSIVE
EMPLOYMENT PROJECTIONS Jobs for each activity in a particular TAZ. MOBILITY PLAN
INDUSTRIAL GROWTH Depends on National and State level policies for the region.
PROJECTIONS Growth trend for city’s existing and planned industrial sectors.
Growth rate of large industrial sectors linked to overall economic growth projections in a country.
SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
ARCHITECTURE,
VIJAYAWADA
LAND USE TRANSITIONS • Understanding and considering changes of land use planning while modeling.
• Consideration of changes from Vacant land to built up , Changes in the land use – from residential to
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commercial, is necessary .
SECTION I
SECTION II
Simulation tools used to study the types of projected land TASK 1
Existing land use type + floor area LAND USE SIMULATION
use changes in a region. TASK 2
Floor Space requirement per TASK 3
capita for each land use/TAZ as TASK 4
estimated STEP 1 – Projection of population and employment and estimating per TASK 5
Capita pace requirement for each activity TASK 6
Input SECTION III
STAGE A – Allocation of non residential activities based on the past trends, SECTION IV
STEP 2 master plan provisions, availability of space.
STAGE B – Allocation of residential activity based on accessibility to jobs for TOOLKIT FOR
each TAZ, Master plan provision, availability of space. COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
STEP 3 Scope of Entire land use transition – from commercial to residential, etc
BUSINESS AS USUAL
STEP 4 Impact of land use on transport to be analysed SCENARIO
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT DEMAND ANALYSIS
TRANSPORT
Base year Modelling PLANNING STUDIO
•The demand for passenger transport estimated using four step model . Trip generation – Trip distribution – Mode choice – Trip assignment
COMPREHENSIVE
•Based on Primary Household survey, transport infrastructure and service quality. MOBILITY PLAN
• Traffic flows compared with actual volume count .
• Transport demand model calibrated for base year – used for analyzing the future of the BAU scenario
Planned strategies
Changes in Socio economic drivers ( population, employment projections)
Changes in land use SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
Inputs for BAU scenario analysis ARCHITECTURE,
VIJAYAWADA
TECHNOLOGY TRANSITIONS
Vehicles and fuels A change in fuel, greater use of CNG, Bio fuels, cleaner petrol and diesel 12
More efficient engines
More electricity transportation. SECTION I
SECTION II
TASK 1
CO2 EMISSIONS AND AIR QUALITY • Estimating Fuel consumption due to travel activity in vehicle kilometre,, to estimate CO2 emissions TASK 2
TASK 3
1. Calculating Fuel Consumption 3. VKTs and Fuel mix TASK 4
TASK 5
TASK 6
SECTION III
SECTION IV
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
2. Vehicle occupancy 4. Fuel use converted to CO2 emission value MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
BUSINESS AS USUAL
SCENARIO
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
Certain points of Concern
SCENARIO 3 • People may be biased for a certain alternative COMPREHENSIVE
either on negative or on positive side. MOBILITY PLAN
• the change in safety and security parameters
needs to be strongly addressed.
• It is likely that inferior modes are not
considered as an available alternative for
middle income and high income group.
• It is extremely important to ensure that an SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
alternative within a choice set does not ARCHITECTURE,
dominate as it is difficult to determine the VIJAYAWADA
trade-offs between different alternatives.
DEVELOPMENT OF URBAN MOBILITY PLAN
MOBILITY PLAN should provide alternatives to enhance mobility to
all users
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
DEVELOPMENT OF
URBAN MOBILITY
PLAN
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
neighborhood
cycling tracks COMPREHENSIVE
design
MOBILITY PLAN
measures
pedestrian footpaths variety in public spaces
To summarize, it should locate activities in a manner that encourages low-carbon mobility and the urban mobility plan, in turn, should
facilitate access to activities. SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
ARCHITECTURE,
VIJAYAWADA
FORMULATION OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORT IMPROVEMENT PLAN
Formulating a public transport improvement plan in a small-sized Indian city can involve several challenges.
assessing transport
demand 18
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
System planning should consider not only where terminal, routes and stops are placed (i.e. routes and stops), but also whether they are DEVELOPMENT OF
accessible to all potential users. The plans for the system should take into account the accessibility issues for pedestrians and cyclists, the
differently abled and elderly people, as well as private vehicle users after they have parked their vehicles. URBAN MOBILITY
PLAN
PREPARATION OF ROAD NETWORK DEVELOPMENT PLAN DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
CMP should list out road projects which are to be developed, strengthened, projects which are to be JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
upgraded and interconnected including hierarchical road network, arterial developed, strengthened, VALLIKANNU |
road construction / widening projects, secondary road construction / upgraded and interconnected
widening projects, intersection improvement projects, flyover projects, TRANSPORT
railway over bridge or underpass projects. PLANNING STUDIO
When planning NMT infrastructure, due consideration should be given to the existing networks and not SECTION I
patches. SECTION II
TASK 1
The design of these facilities should be such that they are inclusive, and provide travel opportunities to For example, all roads where TASK 2
individual are likely to walk
the so-called disadvantaged sectors of society (the physically challenged, urban poor, women, children TASK 3
should include at least 2 meters
and individuals with special needs). TASK 4
of clear, walkable footpath
cycle stand TASK 5
comfortable footpaths streetlights TASK 6
SECTION III
NMT infrastructure SECTION IV
NMT-designed signals cycle tracks Access to activities and
TOOLKIT FOR
at all junctions formal pedestrian transport services should
also be taken into account. COMPREHENSIVE
crossing MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
While at a policy level, NMT planning may be accepted, detailed NMT improvement plans and traffic management measures should be
DEVELOPMENT OF
worked out for CBD, commercial centers, and other major activity centers.
URBAN MOBILITY
FREIGHT MOVEMENT PLAN PLAN
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
The planning for freight movement should address the problem of intermixing of
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
local and regional traffic.
VALLIKANNU |
Non-motorized modes also play significant role in the total freight movement. It TRANSPORT
is, therefore, important to recognize the benefit of non-motorized freight transport
PLANNING STUDIO
while addressing the issue of the last leg connectivity in freight movement.
plan should assess the expected growth of freight
Location of distribution centers for goods should be based on the scale of COMPREHENSIVE
movement of goods. The freight management plan should address issues MOBILITY PLAN
past trends, extent of industrial and
regarding the location of distribution centers, mode of transport, time restrictions,
air and noise pollution etc. commercial activities distribution and
storage facilities in the city
For example, a regional distribution center can be located on the periphery of
the city in conjunction with transport network infrastructure and a local location of wholesale markets,
distribution centers can be located suitable at a number of locations within the SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
direction of city growth etc
city preferably closer to commercial centers. ARCHITECTURE,
and indicate the need for relocation of wholesale markets and
shifting of truck terminals at appropriate locations, preferably on VIJAYAWADA
the periphery of city.
MOBILITY MANAGEMENT MEASURES
In CMP, traffic management plans cover parking management plans, traffic control measures, intermodal facilities, demand management
measures, traffic safety plan and ITS.
20
Mobility management measures suggested in the CMP should enable enhanced use of public transit and NMT modes. SECTION I
SECTION II
As shown in Table below, additional measures should be added to increase the cost to discourage the use of personal motorized travel, TASK 1
including the taxation of cars and fuel, land use planning that encourages shorter travel distances and traffic management by reallocating TASK 2
space on the roads. TASK 3
TASK 4
TASK 5
TASK 6
SECTION III
SECTION IV
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
DEVELOPMENT OF
DEVELOPMENT OF FISCAL MEASURES
URBAN MOBILITY
Fiscal measures should also be considered to achieve a balanced modal split, and to secure the budget necessary to implement urban transport
PLAN
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
projects. As fiscal measures usually correspond to institutional and regulatory measures, the following aspects may have to be examined in the
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
CMP document for consideration of state government:
VALLIKANNU |
Fare policy for public transportation, intermediate public transport and parking
TRANSPORT
Subsidy policy for public transport operators and intermediate transport operators PLANNING STUDIO
Taxation on private vehicles and public transport vehicles COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN
Permits and regularization of intermediate public transport
Influence private vehicle usage through parking and disincentivize free parking with private developments
Setting up of Unified Metropolitan Transport Authority to coordinate urban transport and related issues in million plus cities SCHOOL OF PLANNING &
ARCHITECTURE,
Creating Special Purpose Vehicles particularly for Mass Transit System. VIJAYAWADA
MOBILITY IMPROVEMENT MEASURES AND NUTP OBJECTIVES
The land use and transport measures proposed in the CMP will improve the mobility in
the metropolitan area and cover the critical issues addressed in the NUTP.
21
A table can be prepared summarizing the relationship between the NUTP objectives and SECTION I
the measures proposed in the study, together with a classification of the measures
SECTION II
according to their implementation timeframe (immediate, short, medium and long term) as
per the provision of NUTP.
TASK 1
TASK 2
Traffic Engineering Measures already covered like improvement of Road / Junction TASK 3
sections need to be identified. TASK 4
TASK 5
City-specific plans like Tourist management plan, water transport plan, hill transport like TASK 6
rope ways etc. may be prepared as part of CMP. SECTION III
SECTION IV
TOOLKIT FOR
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN - MoHUA
DEVELOPMENT OF
URBAN MOBILITY
PLAN
DEEPAK | GURUVISWAS |
JAYALAKSHMI | SHARDUL |
VALLIKANNU |
TRANSPORT
PLANNING STUDIO
COMPREHENSIVE
MOBILITY PLAN