UrbantransportationPlanning毕业设计外文翻译.doc
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1、本科毕业设计(论文)外文翻译专业名称:土木工程年级班级:学生姓名:指导教师:河南理工大学土木工程学院二 年 月 日Urban transportation Planning An urban transportation system is basic component of an urban areas social,economic,and physical structure. Not only does the design and performance of a transportation system provide opportunities for mobility,bu
2、t over the long term,it influences patterns of growth and the level of economic activity through the accessibility it provides to land. Planning for the development or maintenance of the urban transportation system is thus an important activity,both for promoting the efficient movement of people and
3、 goods in an urban area and for maintaining the strong supportive role that transportation can play in attaining other community objectives.There are several basic concepts about an urban transportation system that should be kept in mind. Most important,a transportation system in an urban area is de
4、fined as consisting of the facilities and services that allow travel throughout the region,providing opportunities for:(I)mobility to residents of an urban area and movement of goods and (2) accessibility to land .Given this definition,an urban transportation system can be further characterized by t
5、hree major components: the spatial configuration that permits travel from one location to another; the transportation technologies that provide the means of moving over these distances; and the institutional framework that provides for the planning, construction, operation, and maintenance of system
6、 facilities.The Spatial Configuration of a Transportation SystemOne way to describe the spatial dimension of an urban transportation system is to consider the characteristics of individual trips from an origin to a destination. For example, a trip can consist of several types of movement undertaken
7、to achieve different objectives. Travelers leaving home might use a local bus system to reach a suburban subway station(a trip collection process),proceed through the station to the subway platform (a transfer process),ride the subway to a downtown station (a line-haul process),and walk to a place o
8、f employment (a distribution process). Similarly,one can view a home-to-work trip by car as consisting of similar segments,with the local street system providing the trip collection process, a freeway providing the line-haul capability,a parking lot in the central business district serving as a tran
9、sfer point,and walking,as before,serving the distribution function.The facilities and services that provide these opportunities for travel,when interconnected to permit movement from one location to another,form a network. Thus,another way of representing the spatial dimension of an urban transporta
10、tion system is as a set of road and transit networks. Even in the smallest urban areas,where mass transit is not available,the local street network provides the basic spatial characteristic of the transportation system.The transportation system of a city can influence the way in which the citys soci
11、al and economic structure, often called the urban activity system,develops. At the same time,changes in this structure can affect the ability of the transportation system to provide mobility and accessibility. Thus , the transportation system is closely related to the urban activity system and; hist
12、orically, has been an important determinant of urban form.Because of the relation between transportation and urban activities,many of the methods used by transportation planners depend on estimates of trips generated by specific land uses. The relation also suggests that the options available to pub
13、lic officials dealing with transportation problems should include not only those related directly to the transportation system, but also actions such as zoning that affect the distribution of land use, and thus influence the performance of the transportation system.The foregoing considerations point
14、 to two important principles for transportation planning: The transportation system should be Considered as an integral part of the social and economic system in an urban area.Viewed as a set of interconnected facilities and services designed to provide opportunities for travel from one location to
15、another.The Technology of Urban Transportation The technology of urban transportation is closely related to the spatial configuration of the transportation system in that the design transportation networks reflects the speed, operating , and cost characteristics of the vehicle or mode of transportat
16、ion being used. Technology includes the means of propulsion, type of support,means of guidance,and control technique.The development and widespread use of electric streetcars in urban areas during the late nineteenth century was a technological innovation that initiated the transformation of most No
17、rth American cities. The advent of the electric streetcar permitted urban areas to expand beyond the boundaries that had been dictated by previous transportation technologies (e. g.,walking,horse,horsecar),spawning streetcar suburbs with dramatically lower residential densities along streetcar lines
18、 radiating from the central city. Whereas many industries had decentralized along railroad lines leading from the central city,and workers initially had to live near these factories, the introduction of streetcars now permitted more distant living.The success of the streetcar in providing access fro
19、m selected suburban areas to central business districts was followed by public acceptance of a second major technological innovation-the automobile,powered by the internal combustion engine. Increasing consumer preferences for lower-density living and for an ability to travel beyond established urba
20、n boundaries sparked a phenomenal growth in automobile ownership and usage,beginning in the 1920s . The automobile continues and accelerated the evolution of urban structure started by the electric streetcar. Its availability permitted further expansion of urban areas and, more important, provided a
21、ccess to land between the radial streetcar and railroad lines leading into the central city.The technology of the internal-combustion engine,however, also led to the decline of other transportation modes used in urban areas by providing a less expensive and more flexible replacement for rail-based m
22、odes. While the automobile provided new opportunities for personal mobility and urban growth, motor buses rapidly replaced electric streetcars, to the extent that only five North American cities today still operate large-scale streetcar systems-Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Toronto, and San Fran
23、cisco (although this trend has reversed somewhat in recent years with new light rail systems in operation in Edmonton, Calgary, San Diego, and Buffalo). At the same time, the growth of private automobile use has dramatically reduced the use of public transportation in general, particularly since the
24、 end of World War II. According to the latest census figures, in 1980, 62. 3 million Americans normally drove alone to work each day, another 19 million car-pooled, and 6 million used public transportation.The technologies and the resulting modes available today for urban transportation are common t
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