Travel time maps
"Travel Time Maps" allow understanding how far in a region an individual can reach by a certain mode of transport, from a given starting location and starting time. Their more technical name is Isochronal maps (Iso= same, chronos=time, therefore lines reachable in the same time).
Travel Time Maps are proposed as useful by public transport researchers (such as on Jarett Walker's blog Human Transit) in helping people think about their transport system in terms of a geography of mobility and accessibility.
Creating these maps using GIS platforms and relevant open data is now becoming simpler and more attainable. This includes potentially using existing Open source software tools such as OpenTripPlanner.
See Also
External links
- http://www.humantransit.org/2012/11/the-need-for-maps-of-your-freedom.html
- http://opentripplanner.com/2012/07/visualizing-urban-accessibility-with-opentripplanner-analyst
- http://www.mapnificent.net - Free simple travel time maps for cities with a public GTFS feed integrated into Google maps
- http://www.mapumental.com - UK provider of Travel time maps service (originally free, now commercial)
- http://isoscope.martinvonlupin.de/ - "Isoscope, Exploring Mobility" online project - can calculate isocrones for either car or pedestrian travel (uses the HERE API for calculations, presumably using underlying OpenStreetMap data).
This article is issued from Appropedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.