There were several questions raised about our recent traffic study. Below is an explanation of the methodology used to do our traffic study.
Part
of the reason for doing this now is that folks were concerned that we
did not catch the traffic prior to school getting out, were questioning
why we were looking at Linda Mar, and had questions about the traffic
poles. This should help answer those questions.
We're crunching the numbers now and should have the results in the next few weeks.
- John Zentner
The
travel demand estimation also includes actual vehicle trip demand
from comparable developments, including 24-hour driveway counts at
the Ritz-Carlton in Half Moon Bay, Asilomar in Pacific Grove, and
Chaminade in Santa Cruz. All three locations are comparable to the
proposed hotel/resort at the project site. The driveway counts were
conducted on Thursday, June 9, 2016, and the data included the total
number of inbound and outbound vehicles at each location in 15-minute
increments over the 24-hour period. By dividing the total number of
daily and weekday peak-hour vehicle trips by the number of
hotel/resort rooms, a vehicle trip rate will be identified (number of
trips per room).
Travel
demand was also assessed for the current zoning, which would allow up
to 200,000 square feet of commercial (retail) development, by using
actual vehicle driveway counts from a nearby commercial/retail area.
The Linda Mar Center is located 1.1 miles south of the project site
and includes approximately 204,000 square feet of retail development.
Vehicle driveway counts were collected on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 over
a 24-hour period at all four driveway locations. For purposes of
accurately assessing the actual vehicle demand at the site during a
typical weekday, the number of inbound and outbound vehicles at the
McDonald’s will be discounted from the overall calculations, as
these vehicles were in the drive-thru lane.
Trip
reductions (the result of internal trips without moving off-site)
will be calculated using the MXD+ method developed by Fehr &
Peers, which is a combination of quantifiable methods to more
accurately assess trip generation estimation for mixed-use
developments; these quantifiable methods that form the basis for the
MXD+ method were developed and sponsored by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and Transportation Research Board (TRB). The
MXD+ method uses ITE trip generation rates and then adjusts those
estimates to account for the mix of uses and environmental
characteristics (e.g., geographic layout of the site, land use in
surrounding area, socioeconomic data, proximity to land uses and
transportation resources, etc.).
These
data, once analyzed, will provide daily vehicle trips and trip rates
by use as well as AM and PM peak hour vehicle trips and trip rates.
In turn, these will generate traffic demand and current and likely
level of service for each of the local intersections.
Submitted by John Zentner
3 comments:
Mr. Hainey from Green Acres called, he wants his unique mathematical reasoning steam powered crackulator back.
Peter Loeb is Pacifica's leading expert on traffic mitigation. If you don't pay him a hefty fee for his services your study will fail.
Zentner's first mistake.
Talking to Peter Loeb.
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