Javascript must be enabled for the correct page display

Traffic Safety and Spatial Planning: Exploring Relationships between Road Design, Risky Driving Behaviour and Traffic Accidents in Groningen, the Netherlands

Rood, Max (2024) Traffic Safety and Spatial Planning: Exploring Relationships between Road Design, Risky Driving Behaviour and Traffic Accidents in Groningen, the Netherlands. Master thesis.

[img]
Preview
Text
Traffic Safety and Spatial Planning-Final.pdf

Download (16MB) | Preview

Abstract

The decades-long decrease in yearly traffic deaths in the Netherlands has stagnated in recent years. This has created a renewed interest on the part of Dutch institutions in interventions which may further increase traffic safety, including spatial interventions targeting driver behaviour. Academic work on these spatial measures for traffic safety remains scarce, however, as does research targeting risky driving behaviour specifically. This research applies quantitative analysis to secondary data from the province of Groningen in order to expand the body of knowledge on the linkages between road design, risky driving behaviour and traffic accidents in the Netherlands in both urban and rural contexts, investigating factors such as network density, roadside features and speed limits. Findings suggest that road design and urban planning factors such as road type, speed limits and road width, as well as urban planning factors such as network density and address density are, to varying degrees, significant predictors of risky driving incidents and traffic accidents, and that risky driving incidents and traffic accidents are correlated with one another. Fatal traffic accidents are more difficult to predict, however, and the relationship between risky driving and traffic accidents depends on context.

Item Type: Thesis (Master)
Degree programme: Environmental & Infrastructure Planning
Supervisor: Ramezani, S. and Weitkamp, S.G.
Date Deposited: 29 Apr 2024 09:38
Last Modified: 29 Apr 2024 09:38
URI: https://frw.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/id/eprint/4498

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item