An Integrated Model of Transport and Urban Evolution | With an Application to a Metropole of an Emerging Nation | ISBN 9783642602405

An Integrated Model of Transport and Urban Evolution

With an Application to a Metropole of an Emerging Nation

herausgegeben von Wolfgang Weidlich und Günter Haag
Mitwirkende
Beiträge vonF. Englmann
Herausgegeben vonWolfgang Weidlich
Herausgegeben vonGünter Haag
Beiträge vonK. Grützmann
Beiträge vonG. Haag
Beiträge vonP. Nijkamp
Beiträge vonY.S. Popkov
Beiträge vonA. Reggiani
Beiträge vonT. Sigg
Beiträge vonW. Weidlich
Buchcover An Integrated Model of Transport and Urban Evolution  | EAN 9783642602405 | ISBN 3-642-60240-1 | ISBN 978-3-642-60240-5

An Integrated Model of Transport and Urban Evolution

With an Application to a Metropole of an Emerging Nation

herausgegeben von Wolfgang Weidlich und Günter Haag
Mitwirkende
Beiträge vonF. Englmann
Herausgegeben vonWolfgang Weidlich
Herausgegeben vonGünter Haag
Beiträge vonK. Grützmann
Beiträge vonG. Haag
Beiträge vonP. Nijkamp
Beiträge vonY.S. Popkov
Beiträge vonA. Reggiani
Beiträge vonT. Sigg
Beiträge vonW. Weidlich
Gone are the days when mobility was nearly always a question of having a vehicle. Today the issue of road capacity is becoming ever more pressing. Even the safest, most comfortable and 100% emissions-free vehicle is only of limited use if it is stuck in a traffic jam. Mobility is a key human need and an important factor in the economy. It is a matter of logic that a com pany like DaimlerChrysler should make every endeavor to safeguard mo bility, thereby fulfilling humanity's economic, social and environmental needs. Nonetheless, traffic and mobility problems are the inevitable result of a concentration of people and markets. Bombay, Lagos, Shanghai, Jakarta, Sao Paulo, Cairo, Mexico City - virtually half of the world's population is urban-based, and the majority live in the metropolitan regions of the Third World. The mega-cities in the so-called developing nations are facing a dramatic increase in traffic levels. Gridlock looms on the horizon. Should traffic-choked streets become a permanent and daily occurrence, economic development will be held in check and pollution will spiral.