TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of a novel pricing mechanism for road closures based on accessibility losses
AU - Alitani, Ahmad
AU - Loder, Allister
AU - Kinigadner, Julia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Road or lane closures due to maintenance or construction sites are annoying to mobile people. These inconveniences are externalities and so-called “social costs” and they impact, e.g., traffic and economic activities. To reduce these social costs, economists suggest using instruments for internalizing these costs. First schemes emerged that aim to incentivize the closure's causer to reduce the disruption to a minimum, e.g., “London's Lane Rental Scheme”. However, given the complex interactions in large networks with several parallel closures, the challenge becomes to identify the social costs and then attribute them to specific sites. In this paper, we propose to use accessibility to estimate the social costs of closures. Accessibility establishes a link between traffic in networks and land use. It provides a relationship with the economic performance of regions: a closure reduces accessibility across the network, which allows estimating economic losses. We illustrate the mechanism for Munich. We find that on a daily basis, the economic losses are about a hundred euros for closing a single lane of a collector road to a couple of thousand euros for closing an arterial. Assuming cost-based pricing, these social costs can serve as a pricing estimate for the party causing the closure.
AB - Road or lane closures due to maintenance or construction sites are annoying to mobile people. These inconveniences are externalities and so-called “social costs” and they impact, e.g., traffic and economic activities. To reduce these social costs, economists suggest using instruments for internalizing these costs. First schemes emerged that aim to incentivize the closure's causer to reduce the disruption to a minimum, e.g., “London's Lane Rental Scheme”. However, given the complex interactions in large networks with several parallel closures, the challenge becomes to identify the social costs and then attribute them to specific sites. In this paper, we propose to use accessibility to estimate the social costs of closures. Accessibility establishes a link between traffic in networks and land use. It provides a relationship with the economic performance of regions: a closure reduces accessibility across the network, which allows estimating economic losses. We illustrate the mechanism for Munich. We find that on a daily basis, the economic losses are about a hundred euros for closing a single lane of a collector road to a couple of thousand euros for closing an arterial. Assuming cost-based pricing, these social costs can serve as a pricing estimate for the party causing the closure.
KW - Accessibility
KW - agglomeration
KW - construction
KW - road closure
KW - social cost
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85216197000&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.trpro.2024.12.140
DO - 10.1016/j.trpro.2024.12.140
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85216197000
SN - 2352-1457
VL - 82
SP - 1550
EP - 1561
JO - Transportation Research Procedia
JF - Transportation Research Procedia
T2 - 16th World Conference on Transport Research, WCTR 2023
Y2 - 17 July 2023 through 21 July 2023
ER -