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Route choice and residential environment: introducing liveability requirements in navigation systems in Flanders

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Vehicle route planning and navigation systems aim to provide the most beneficial
routes to their users while disregarding the impact on the liveability of the surrounding
residential areas. Therefore, future integration of route choice behaviour by route planners and
measures to improve liveability and safety standards should be pursued. The Spatial Plan for
Flanders, which is the overarching spatial policy plan in the northern part of Belgium,2
determines a system of road categories aimed at optimising the liveability of sensitive areas,
such as residential neighbourhoods or school precincts, without jeopardizing accessibility.
This paper examines to what extent routes proposed by commercial route planners differ from
more socially desirable routes that are guided by the policy principles of road categorisation
in Flanders as proposed by the plan. Results show that commercial route-planners' routes
choose more often roads of the lowest category than socially acceptable. However, for some
of the assessed connections, the socially desired alternative is a feasible route as well, which
is not excessively increasing time consumption or distance travelled. It is concluded that the
implementation of the prevailing road categorisation system in Flanders in routing algorithms
has the potential to promote more sustainable route choices, while infrastructural measures
that discourage cut-through traffic may help materialising the categorisation system.
Tijdschrift: Journal of Transport Geography
ISSN: 0966-6923
Volume: 37
Pagina's: 19-27
Trefwoorden:navigation systems, liveability, transport planning, Flanders
  • Scopus Id: 84899505625