A New Focus on Climate & Congestion
A New Focus on Climate & Congestion

You want to travel freely.
Today, less than 35% of vehicle seats are filled on urban freeways during peak hours even though demand overwhelms available capacity. As public infrastructure, this level of efficiency raises questions about whether the roadway space is being wisely used. It also raises questions about how performance is traditionally measured.

Everyone wants to travel freely.
Freeways are often described as having problems when they are congested due to slow speeds instead of having too many unfilled seats. To some degree, this outcome is a result of cultural preferences for driving personal vehicles. This preference rates high on personal freedom, comfort, and convenience, but low on efficient use of the limited public roadway supply. If greater efficiency of the roadway network is desirable (i.e., more seats occupied) to improve travel reliability and reduce adverse travel effects such as delay, wasted fuel and air pollution, then demand management is essential.

Managing travel demand helps.
Demand management can include a range of strategies from how roadways are operated and controlled to behavioral incentives that influence when and how much people travel and by what modes. These strategies often require some tradeoffs between personal travel freedom and greater network efficiency or utilization. How to balance these tradeoffs is the essential question facing the public agencies that operate our roads.
share this article
Explore More
How Vehicle Electrification Affects the Gas Tax
With electric vehicle sales increasing, how durable is our ability to build and maintain highway and transit infrastructure through current gas tax measures? Explore the full scope of promoting a cleaner and more resilient transportation system.
2022 Staff Promotions
Congratulations to 151 team members on earning promotions this year, and to these 46 individuals who achieved step-level promotions effective July 1.
Re-envisioning Long-Range Transportation Plans
Explore how four communities shifted their plans’ focus from a more traditional emphasis on vehicle capacity and roadway expansion to planning systems oriented around people.



