COMMUNICATION INNOVATIONS, URBAN FORM AND TRAVEL DEMAND. SOME HYPOTHESES AND A BIBLIOGRAPHY
HYPOTHESES ARE DEVELOPED ABOUT THE EFFECTS OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS ADVANCES ON URBAN GROWTH PATTERNS AND URBAN TRAVEL DEMANDS. IT IS SUGGESTED THAT CBD OFFICE EMPLOYMENT MIGHT DECENTRALIZE IF TELECOMMUNICATIONS COULD EFFECTIVELY SUBSTITUTE FOR SHORT INTER-OFFICE BUSINESS TRIPS AND THAT DECENTRALIZATION WOULD ALTER JOURNEY-TO-WORK PATTERNS AND THE VIABILITY OF CERTAIN PUBLIC TRANSIT SYSTEMS. MAJOR RESEARCH QUESTIONS ARE RAISED AND KEYED TO AN EXTENSIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY. /NTIS/
-
Corporate Authors:
University of Washington, Seattle
Seattle, WA United States 98195 -
Authors:
- Harness, R C
- Publication Date: 1972-1
Media Info
- Pagination: 62 p.
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Central business districts; Communication systems; Decentralization; Hypothesis testing; Research; Travel demand; Urban growth
- Uncontrolled Terms: Hypothesis
- Old TRIS Terms: Electric communication systems
- Subject Areas: Data and Information Technology; Highways; Operations and Traffic Management; Research;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00226592
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: HELP
- Report/Paper Numbers: No Rr-71-2 Res Rept
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Jun 25 1973 12:00AM