scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Gasoline Consumption and Cities: A Comparison of U.S. Cities with a Global Survey

Peter Newman, +1 more
- 31 Mar 1989 - 
- Vol. 55, Iss: 1, pp 24-37
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This paper found that gasoline consumption per capita in ten large United States cities varies by up to 40 percent, primarily due to land use and transportation planning factors, rather than price or income variations.
Abstract
Gasoline consumption per capita in ten large United States cities varies by up to 40 percent, primarily because of land use and transportation planning factors, rather than price or income variations. The same patterns, though more extreme, appear in a global sample of 32 cities. Here, average gasoline consumption in U.S. cities was nearly twice as high as in Australian cities, four times higher than in European cities and ten times higher than in Asian cities. Allowing for variations in gasoline price, income, and vehicle efficiency explains only half of these differences. We suggest physical planning policies, particularly reurbanization and a reorientation of transportation priorities as a means of reducing gasoline consumption and automobile dependence.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Travel demand and the 3ds: density, diversity, and design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined how the built environment affects trip rates and mode choice of residents in the San Francisco Bay Area using 1990 travel diary data and land-use records obtained from the U.S. census, regional inventories, and field surveys.
Journal ArticleDOI

Green Cities, Growing Cities, Just Cities?: Urban Planning and the Contradictions of Sustainable Development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a "planner's triangle" with sustainable development located at its center, and argue that planners would benefit both from integrating social theory with environmental thinking and from combining their substantive skills with techniques for community conflict resolution, to confront economic and environmental injustice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are Compact Cities a Desirable Planning Goal

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate whether or not the promotion of compact cities is a worthwhile planning goal and find that the social equity of compactness does not support the case for promoting compact cities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainable Urban Forms Their Typologies, Models, and Concepts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify sustainable urban forms and their design concepts and address the question of whether certain urban forms contribute more than others to sustainability, and propose a Matrix of Sustainable Urban Form to help planners in assessing the contribution of different urban forms to sustainability.
Journal ArticleDOI

A micro-analysis of land use and travel in five neighborhoods in the San Francisco Bay Area

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of land use and attitudinal characteristics on travel behavior for five diverse San Francisco Bay Area neighborhoods were examined, and the finding that attitudes are more strongly associated with travel than are land use characteristics suggests that land use policies promoting higher densities and mixtures may not alter travel demand materially unless residents' attitudes are also changed.
References
More filters
Book

Tools for Conviviality

Ivan Illich
TL;DR: The multidimensional analysis of ceilings for industrial growth was first formulated in a Spanish document co-authored by Valentina Borremans and myself and submitted as a guideline for a meeting of two dozen Chilean socialists and other Latin Americans at CIDOC (the Center for Intercultural Documentation) in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainable development of the biosphere

William C. Clark, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1988 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a strategic framework for understanding and managing the long-term and large-scale interactions between socio-economic development and the conservation of the world's environment.

Urban Europe: a study of growth and decline

TL;DR: The costs of urban growth in Europe were studied by 14 research teams from European countries under the auspices of the European Coordination Centre for Research and Documentation in Social Sciences in Vienna Austria as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved international comparisons of real product and its composition: 1950–1980

TL;DR: In this article, a set of international comparisons is developed for 124 countries over the three post World War II decades, 1950-80, and a Data Table is presented which gives, for most countries and most years, real product estimates for three different national income concepts and for the major subaggregates consumption, investment and government.
Related Papers (5)