Road user charging in urban areas and highways has been studied and implemented in several places worldwide. However, limited attention has been given so far to the impacts of a local road user charging scheme for rural or other protected areas, particularly in the UK. The focus of this paper is the road user charging scheme, which has been proposed for implementation in the Upper Derwent valley of the Peak District national park. By applying both quantitative and qualitative methods it is shown that such schemes share considerable differences compared to other urban or highway schemes, such as diverse objectives, trip purposes, visitors' value of time and dispersion of traffic in neighbouring areas. Nonetheless, management of a rural scheme, the evaluation method used, as well as equity issues appear to be equally significant as in other urban or highway schemes. The conclusion is that a road user charging scheme in the Upper Derwent valley could bring positive impacts by reducing high car usage at peak periods and creating additional revenue to serve essential improvements in the area, but is sensitive to the income and age of the visitors.
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June 2010
Research Article|
June 01 2010
Road user charging in rural areas: Upper Derwent valley, UK Available to Purchase
N. Thomopoulos, MSc, MeRSA;
N. Thomopoulos, MSc, MeRSA
Marie Curie EST Research Fellow
Institute of Transport Studies, University of Leeds, UK
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T. Takama, DPhil, MSc
T. Takama, DPhil, MSc
Research Fellow
Stockholm Environment Institute, Oxford, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Revision Received:
December 03 2007
Accepted:
October 12 2009
Online ISSN: 1751-7710
Print ISSN: 0965-092X
© 2010 Thomas Telford Ltd
2010
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Transport (2010) 163 (2): 93–107.
Article history
Revision Received:
December 03 2007
Accepted:
October 12 2009
Citation
Thomopoulos N, Takama T (2010), "Road user charging in rural areas: Upper Derwent valley, UK". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Transport, Vol. 163 No. 2 pp. 93–107, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/tran.2010.163.2.93
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