Skip to main content

Guide on how to improve bike network connectivity with modest changes

The Mineta Transportation Institute has released a peer-reviewed research report, Low-Stress Bicycling and Network Connectivity. As part of its work, the research team created measures of low-stress bicycle route connectivity that can be used to evaluate and guide bicycle network planning. As a result, the team proposed a set of criteria by which road segments can be classified into four levels of traffic stress (LTS). The report includes a sample case study in which every street in San Jose, California, is
June 1, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
RSSThe 5277 Mineta Transportation Institute has released a peer-reviewed research report, Low-Stress Bicycling and Network Connectivity. As part of its work, the research team created measures of low-stress bicycle route connectivity that can be used to evaluate and guide bicycle network planning. As a result, the team proposed a set of criteria by which road segments can be classified into four levels of traffic stress (LTS). The report includes a sample case study in which every street in San Jose, California, is classified by LTS.

"For a bicycling network to attract the widest possible segment of the population, its most fundamental attribute should be low-stress connectivity," said Maaza C. Mekuria, one of the authors of the report. "In other words, we should be providing routes between people's origins and destinations that do not require cyclists to use links that exceed their tolerance for traffic stress, and that do not involve an undue number of detours. So we proposed and tested the practicality of a new way to define the bicycle network as the set of streets and paths that people consider acceptably safe for bicycling."

To fulfil a second goal, the researchers developed metrics for low-stress connectivity, or the ability of a network to connect travellers' origins to their destinations without subjecting them to unacceptably stressful links.

To make bicycling safer and more appealing, cities often make bicycle-related improvements to certain streets. However, those improvements do not necessarily represent the network of paths and streets that people deem safe enough to use. The LTS criteria can distinguish four levels of a street network's stressfulness, corresponding to identified user profiles, and they offer cities a way of mapping their bicycling networks according to which populations they serve rather than according to facility types. The research also highlights the importance of intersection approaches and street crossings in network connectivity.

The report includes several new analysis tools for visualizing connectivity, including stress maps, shortest-path trees, and maps highlighting barriers and islands. Illustrations and figures include examples of bike lanes, various stress maps, sample connectivity graphs, and more. Tables include levels of traffic stress for various configurations, distribution of centre-line miles by level of traffic stress, proposed improvements, and more.

The free 68-page report is available for download here.

Related Content

  • Audi Urban Intelligent Assist research programme launched
    May 21, 2012
    A new research initiative launched by Audi, its electronics research laboratory in Silicon Valley and four top US universities aims to develop technologies focused on easing the congestion, dangers and inconveniences that often confront drivers in the world's biggest cities. The new three-year Audi Urban Intelligent Assist research initiative aims to take connected car, driver assistance and infrastructure electronics to the next level of providing detailed information so motorists have a better sense of th
  • The Canadian way
    July 16, 2012
    Delcan has developed an ITS project evaluation methodology for Transport Canada. Victor Bruzon explains how it will assist in selecting and managing programmes. ITS projects offer a cost-effective solution for many transportation problems. Individual projects are often not evaluated and such evaluations can be restricted by limited data, the ability of ITS to affect only a portion of the transport network, and by evaluation methodologies that were developed with more traditional transport investments in min
  • Men are more stressed than women when stuck in traffic
    April 23, 2012
    According to new research from TomTom, men's stress levels soar a staggering seven times higher than a woman's when stuck in heavy traffic. Psychologists tested volunteers for the rise in stress chemicals - Immunoglobulin A (IgA - an immune system marker) and alpha-amylase (a stress marker) - in their saliva when caught up in a traffic jam. The levels for women in the study increased by 8.7 per cent while stuck behind the wheel - but for men it shot up by a worrying 60 per cent in the same gridlock scenario
  • New drug-driving laws a ‘step forward for road safety’
    March 2, 2015
    Leading road safety charity the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) has described the introduction of new drug-driving laws as ‘a big step forward for road safety.’ The legislation comes into force in from 2 March 2015 in England and Wales and is designed to catch people who risk other people’s lives by getting behind the wheel after taking drugs, and not those taking legitimate medicines that don’t impair their ability to drive. The new law sets limits at very low levels for eight drugs commonly associat