Congestion and Infrastructure
The term ‘congestion’ is used to denote the movement of a large crowd of individuals (without or with goods) either by walking or by utilizing the many transport media such as cycles, buses, automobiles, etc., and movement of goods (which includes freight movement) across a road toll, ports, bridges, and other forms of infrastructure without delaying other goods and individuals in transit. Congestion typically leads to motor traffic and human hold-ups on urban (i.e., within -town or -city) roads or those connecting different urban cities; (for instance, when a lengthy line of automobiles or individuals are held up due to traffic jams for any duration, causing delayed movements owing to limited passage ways). This commonly happens in urban areas (Dixon, 1996). Urban areas, within the context of this paper, are defined as towns or cities characterized by a large population density as well as several infrastructural facilities such as roads, water supply network, communication system, electricity supply network, and so forth.
Infrastructure denotes the basic systems and services that serve a nation, urban city, town or other place; it includes facilities and services vital to nations’ economic functioning. Infrastructure entails private as well as public improvements in the form of bridges, roads, tunnels, electricity grids, sewers, water supply, and telecommunication networks (encompassing...
References
Dixon, L. B. (1996). Bicycle and pedestrian level-of-service performance measures and standards for congestion management systems. Transportation Research Record, 1538(1), 1-9.
Hernandez, H. (2012). Temporal variations for monitoring traffic in urban areas.
Thobani, M. (1999). Private infrastructure, public risk. Finance and development, 36(1), 50.
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