Trip generation Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Trip generation is the first step in the conventional four-step transportation planning process (followed by trip distribution, mode choice, and route assignment), widely used for forecasting travel demands. It predicts the number of trips originating in or destined for a particular traffic analysis zone.In the main trip generation analysis is focused on residences, and that trip generation is thought of as a function of the social and economic attributes of households. At the level of the traffic analysis zone, the language is that of land uses "producing" or generating trips. Zones are also destinations of trips, trip attractors. The analysis of attractors focuses on nonresidential land uses.
| Table of contents |
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2 Early Analysis 3 Later Analysis 4 ITE Trip Generation procedures |
A forecasting activity, such as one based on the concept of economic base analysis, provides aggregate measures of population and activity growth. Land use forecasting distributes forecast changes in activities in a disaggregate-spatial manner among zones. The next step in the transportation planning process addresses the question of the frequency of origins and destinations of trips in each zone: for short, trip generation.
The first zonal trip generation (and its inverse, attraction) analysis in the Chicago Area Transportation Study (CATS) followed the “decay of activity intensity with distance from the central business district (CBD)” thinking current at the time. Data from extensive surveys were arrayed and interpreted on a-distance-from-CBD scale. For example, a commercial land use in ring 0 (the CBD and vicinity) was found to generate 728 vehicle trips per day in 1956. That same land use in ring 5 (about 17 km (11 miles) from the CBD) generated about 150 trips per day.
The case of trip destinations will illustrate use of the concept of activity decline with intensity (as measured by distance from CBD) worked. Destination data are arrayed:
Input data
Early Analysis
| Ring | Manufacturing | Commercial | Open Space | etc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | X1m | X1c | etc | |
| . | . | . | . | |
| . | . | . | . | |
| 7 | x7m | x7c | etc. |
The land use analysis provides information on how land uses will change from an initial year (say t = 0) to some forecast year (say t = 20). Suppose we are examining a zone. We take the mix of land uses projected, say, for year t = 20 and apply the trip destination rates for the ring in which the zone is located. That is, there will this many acres of commercial land use, that many acres of public open space, etc., in the zone. The acres of each use type are multiplied by the ring specific destination rates. The result is summed to yield the zone’s trip destinations. It is to be noted that the CATS assumed that trip destination rates would not change over time.
| Land Use Type | Trips |
|---|---|
| Department Store | X |
| Grocery Store | Y |
| etc. |
Such a list can be improved by adding information. Large, medium, and small might be defined for each activity and rates given by size. Number of employees might be used: for example, <10, 10-20, etc. Also, floor space is used to refine estimates.
In other cases, regressions, usually of the form trip rate = f(number of employees, floor area of establishment), are made for land use types.
Special treatment is often given major trip generators: large shopping centers, airports, large manufacturing plants, and recreation facilities.
The theoretical work related to trip generation analysis is grouped under the rubric travel demand theory, which treats trip generation-attraction, as well as mode choice, route selection, and other topics.
