Site icon Local Government Commission

New Thinking for a New Transportation Age

This fact sheet (PDF, 1 MB) highlights five principles of the “New Transportation Age.” These principles derive from research and cutting-edge thinking that is often surprising and counterintuitive in that it contradicts many of the axioms of the post war era of automobile-oriented transportation engineering and planning.

Hallmarks of this shift include engineers reevaluating the approach they use to define and solve problems. For instance, many are now questioning the high value placed on moving vehicle traffic if it comes at the expense of other transportation and community goals. Is it acceptable to increasetraffic flow through urban neighborhoods and commercial districts if that reduces pedestrian mobility and degrades community livability? Is it such a good idea to add highway capacity if it exacerbates urban sprawl and does little to reduce congestion? As noted transportation planner and researcher Reid Ewing, of Rutgers University, points out, transportation and traffic engineering leaders are now creating more accessible, multi-modal communities with diverse travel options – communities where the need to travel is reduced.

New Thinking for a New Transportation Age (PDF, 1 MB).

For more information, call the Local Government Commission at 916-448-1198, or 1-800-290-8202.

Resources on Information in Fact Sheet Introduction

More and Wider Roads Create More Traffic

Good Health and Transportation

Walking Is Transportation

Beware of Biased Language

This project is funded by the Physical Activity and Health Initiative, California Department of Health Services under a Preventive Health Services Block Grant from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Work performed as part of a UC San Francisco contract.