| Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.22 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This study investigates the factors that influenced the allocation of motorways across municipalities in mainland
Portugal. Our analysis, based on Poisson Pseudo-maximum Likelihood models, suggests that population size and
market potential in 1981 are important determinants of motorway density in 2020. Physical and geographical
variables also help explain the spatial distribution of motorway investment, as terrain ruggedness and distance to
the coast are negatively associated with motorway density. In addition, we consider the influence of the proximity to historical and pre-existing transport networks on the allocation of motorways; we find that municipalities that are closer to 1800's itineraries, the main roads of the 1945's National Road Plan, and 1981's train
stations appear to have higher motorway densities in 2020, but this effect is concentrated in the vast and sparsely
populated area of the country that excludes what we term the high-density Portuguese “blue banana”. Interestingly, it is also only in this low-density region that partisan alignment between the municipal and the national
levels of government appears to affect the allocation of transport investment, which suggests that motorways are
more of a political asset in more remote or less urbanised areas.
Description
Keywords
Transport Infrastructure Motorways Portuguese municipalities Historical transport networks Population accessibility PPML
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Rocha, Bruno T. (et al.) (2022). "What drives the allocation of motorways? Evidence from Portugal's fast-expanding network". Journal of Transport Geography, 102:1-13
Publisher
Elsevier
