Auckland Transport Alignment Project Foundation Report
Auckland Transport Alignment Project Foundation Report
Auckland Transport Alignment Project Foundation Report
Auckland Transport
Alignment Project
Foundation Report
Contents
Executive Summary 4
1 Introduction 12
1.2. Background 14
3 Future Trends 24
3.1. Introduction 25
5.3. Congestion 48
6 Next Steps 56
February 2016
Executive Summary
Objectives
Measures
Enabling growth
Safety and greenhouse gas emissions
Asset condition
Distribution of costs and benefits by area
Network resilience
Within Auckland there are important sub-regional differences. Generally, the central (isthmus) area
benefits the most while other parts of Auckland experience a much more mixed and patchy transport
future. The west and south appear to face the greatest private vehicle access challenges into the future and
are also the areas where public transport improvements appear most muted.
With more than a million people projected to be living in the western and southern parts of Auckland by
2046, higher levels of deprivation and a number of key future urban growth areas, the wider impacts of
these areas being at least partly excluded from the benefits of Aucklands expanding employment base
over the next 30 years are potentially significant.
Congestion is projected to become more widespread and severe over the next 30 years due to increasing
travel demand. This is particularly evident on the motorway network and occurs at both weekday peak and
inter-peak times. As congestion increases travel time variability is also likely to grow.
An increase in public transport mode share occurs broadly throughout Auckland over the next 30 years,
reaching 15% of all peak-time trips by 2046. Improvements are unevenly spread, with a particularly low
level of mode share growth occurring in the south. For large parts of the overall transport task, particularly
in outer areas of Auckland, public transports role is not projected to notably increase under the APTN.
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Next Steps
The projects next phase will involve testing packages of interventions (including projects, services and
policies) to understand how well they contribute to addressing the problems that have been identified. In
addition to investments in infrastructure and services that increase system capacity, the project will also
assess demand-side interventions that could improve the productivity of the existing transport system.
The analysis to date suggests a need to focus on addressing the following issues:
Access to employment and labour
an overall decline in access to employment by car between 2013 and 2036, particularly in the west and
south
a low level of improvement in public transport access for people in the south and west, for accessing
jobs in the south, and the slowing of public transport access improvements beyond 2026
the extent to which transport interventions alone can improve access to employment
Congestion
increased levels of congestion between 2013 and 2036, particularly on the motorway network
key bottlenecks on the motorways and local road network which impact on overall accessibility and trip
reliability
Public transport mode share
investigation of options to increase public transport mode share, particularly attracting longer trips off
the motorway network to reduce congestion
the low level of public transport mode share growth in South Auckland, particularly in the first decade.
The projects next phases will also look how packages perform against providing value for money, net
benefits to users and the other key outcomes identified in the evaluation framework.
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Part 1
Introduction
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1.2. Background
The Government and Auckland Council both recognise the importance of Aucklands economic success to
the national economy. As joint transport investors, they also have a shared interest in ensuring value for
money from transport investments. To this end, Government and Auckland Council have agreed on the
need to develop an agreed strategic approach that delivers better returns from transport investment than
current plans. This challenge has given rise to the Auckland Transport Alignment Project (the project).
In early 2015 Auckland Council completed consultation on two transport networks: the Basic Transport
Network and the Auckland Plan Transport Network as well as options for how the additional expenditure
required to deliver the 30-year Auckland Plan Transport Network would be funded. From 2018, Auckland
Council estimates that an additional $300 million per year would be required to deliver the Auckland Plan
Transport Network.
The Government is committed to ensuring Aucklands transport system is able to meet the citys needs
and recognises Auckland will likely need additional investment in transport infrastructure in the coming
decades to provide for its significant forecast growth. Before considering additional funding or funding
tools, however, the Government wishes to ensure that the future transport programme addresses
Aucklands transport challenges and provides value for money.
The purpose of the project, therefore, is to improve alignment between the Council and Government over
the way Aucklands transport system should develop.
Project Objectives
The focus of the project is to test whether better returns from transport investment can be achieved in
the medium and long-term, particularly in relation to the following objectives:
i. To support economic growth and increased productivity by ensuring access to employment/
labour improves relative to current levels as Aucklands population grows
ii. To improve congestion results, relative to predicted levels, in particular travel time and reliability,
in the peak period and to ensure congestion does not become widespread during working hours
iii. To improve public transports mode share, relative to predicted results, where it will address
congestion
iv. To ensure any increases in the financial costs of using the transport system deliver net benefits to
users of the system
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The project involves Auckland Council, Auckland Transport, the Ministry of Transport, the New Zealand
Transport Agency, Treasury and the State Services Commission. It has three major deliverables:
First Deliverable
Second Deliverable
Third Deliverable
An overview of the
context (including the
impact of technology),
problem definition,
desired outcomes and
measures
(This document)
This foundation report comprises the first deliverable. It includes the following sections:
A summary of Aucklands current transport situation, including recent trends and how Auckland
compares with similar cities internationally.
An outline of future trends that will impact on Aucklands transport system, including growth, changing
land-use and travel trends. Uncertainties with future trends are also discussed, including from the impact
of changing technology on transport.
An evaluation framework to test an interventions (or combination of interventions) contribution to
desired outcomes
A presentation and description of key problems for future stages of the project to focus on, through
analysis of forecast results of the Auckland Plan Transport Network.
This report will guide the development and assessment of intervention packages (combinations of
transport projects, services and policies) to inform the subsequent project deliverables.
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Part 2
Aucklands Current
Transport Situation
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Public transport use has also increased substantially over the past decade, growing from 50 million to over
80 million annual boardings. There has been an increase in public transport mode share for journeys to
work (although the proportion of drivers has remained unchanged) and more people at peak times now
enter the Auckland city centre by public transport than private vehicle.
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Growth in vehicular travel has slowed over the past 10 years, compared to decades of previous growth
in both total and per capita travel. Since 2006 per capita annual travel has slightly declined. However,
this decline in per capita travel has been outweighed by population growth and total annual travel has
increased by approximately 980 million kilometres (8.4%) between 2006 and 2013, as shown below5:
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Part 3
Future Trends
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3.1. Introduction
Undertaking long-term strategic transport planning relies upon making a large number of assumptions
about the future. Uncertainty about these assumptions and their impact on future transport trends
increases as future time horizons for the analysis extend. This section outlines a number of the
assumptions, including uncertainties, and their resulting trends that form the baseline for the problem
definition in section 5 of this report.
A number of these assumptions may be tested in later stages of the project to develop a better
understanding of how different packages of interventions would perform in a range of future scenarios.
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Two key growth distribution trends are highlighted in the maps above.
Population growth is spread throughout the Auckland urban area and extends into major future urban
growth areas to the north, northwest and south of the existing city. Nearly a third of population growth
is projected to occur in areas beyond 20 km of the city centre.
Employment growth is highly concentrated in a few locations, particularly the city centre, the Airport
and other major metropolitan centres. Over a third of employment growth is projected to occur within
5km of the city centre. The growth in service sector jobs, which often prefer to locate in major centres
to benefit from agglomeration, is a key force behind the projected concentration of employment
growth.
The trends are further illustrated in the graph below by comparing the level of population and employment
growth over the next 30 years occurring in 5 km bands from the city centre.
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behind Auckland seaport and Port of Tauranga19. Growth in passenger numbers and freight from the
Airport will increase the demands on Aucklands transport network connecting people and goods to the
rest of Auckland and New Zealand.
The Ports of Auckland is the countrys largest import container port by volume and value. Approximately
$26.4 billion of trade passes through Ports of Auckland each year, roughly 31% of New Zealands total
trade20. Around 800,000 containers are moved to and from the port every year, along with bulk imports
and exports21. MetroPort, operated by the Port of Tauranga, is also an important international gateway for
exports and imports. Around 170,000 containers move to and from the terminal by road within Auckland,
with rail moving the freight to and from the Port of Tauranga. Currently trains carrying up to 104
containers run five to six times a day to and from this part of Auckland22.
International trends towards bigger ships may result in more concentrated and consolidated import
activity in Auckland and/or surrounding ports. The Port Future Study is taking place in parallel with the
project, and will analyse the future of the Ports of Auckland. The findings of that study will feed into this
project as required.
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New technologies present an exciting range of opportunities for the transport sector, with the potential to
fundamentally change the nature of transport demand and public sector interventions. However, there
is considerable uncertainty attached to the nature and timing of technological developments in the New
Zealand context, and the impacts of that they may have on the Auckland transport system. For example,
increased travel demand and the financial, regulatory and on-road implications of transitioning to new
technology could reduce or even offset any efficiency savings. The timing for uptake of new technologies
to reach a point where it significantly improves network efficiency also remains unclear. Investment
in transport infrastructure and services will be influenced by the direction of change brought about by
technology trends.
The next stage of the project will include a more detailed assessment of the opportunities and
uncertainties that technology change presents. This will include the identification of future scenarios
which will allow the impacts of different technology futures to be sensitivity tested. A similar
approach will be taken to address other key assumptions, such as future population growth and land
use projections.
A key challenge for the project will be to identify strategic approaches that are able to respond to
future opportunities, while maintaining the flexibility to adapt to potential changes in demand,
technologies and behaviour as they emerge.
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Part 4
Objectives
and Evaluation
Framework
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Interventions:
Project Objectives:
Broad Outcomes:
Infrastructure
investments
Service provision
Policies
Improve accessibilty
Improve congestion
results
Improve public
transport mode share
Ensure net benefits to
transport users
Other Key Outcomes
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Objective
Measure
Headline KPI
Improve access to
employment and labour
Improve congestion
results
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Objective
Measure
Headline KPI
In addition to the project objectives, a number of other key outcomes will be evaluated through the
framework below:
Other Key
Outcomes
Measure
Support access to
housing
Transport infrastructure in
place when required for new
housing
Minimise harm
Safety
Emissions
Impacts on geographical
areas
Renewals backlog
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Part 5
Understanding
the Problem
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2015-2025
City Rail Link
Accelerated Motorway
Project Package
AMETI (Panmure to
Pakuranga)
2025-2035
AMETI (Pakuranga to
Botany)
Additional Waitemata
Harbour Crossing
Penlink
Northwestern Busway
Rail electrification to
Pukekohe
Warkworth-Wellsford
Puhoi-Warkworth
Major infrastructure to
support future urban
growth
Implementation of new
public transport network
2035-2045
Major infrastructure to
support future urban
growth
Infrastructure to support
Special Housing Areas
The evaluation framework outlined above has been used to test how the APTN performs against the
project objectives. This is an initial analysis using the Auckland strategic transport model and baseline
assumptions, the results of which are summarised in the following sections.
While the strategic transport model results provide a useful overview of future performance, some care
is needed in interpreting region-wide average results, as they can mask some significant local variations.
Furthermore, the model results do not paint a complete picture of all of the issues that need to be
addressed. Further refinement incorporating additional information in areas such as freight, as well as
testing different future scenarios that consider more significant changes in demand patterns that may arise
from factors such as changing technology, will be undertaken in later stages of the project.
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With private vehicles projected to account for around 75% of motorised journeys to work in 2036, the
number of potential jobs available to the majority of travellers within an average commute time is not
projected to increase until the 2030s (and actually marginally decreases up to 2026). This is despite the
total number of jobs in the region increasing by around 30% over the same period. Essentially, longer trip
times are offsetting the benefits of additional employment growth for the majority of commuters in the
next 15 years.
These regional figures mask some important variations between different parts of the region and over
time. Access to employment by both car and public transport for those living in the central (isthmus)
part of Auckland appears to improve throughout the next 30 years, reflecting the general growth in
employment as well as its projected centralisation. However, increased congestion for cars and road-based
public transport is likely to have a negative impact on access to some employment locations, such as the
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city centre. Further work will be needed to understand the extent of this problem, and how it should be
addressed.
Access to employment from the north, west and south tells a much more mixed story:
In parts of the north car access declines up to 2026 while the whole area sees a significant increase in
car access after 2026. Public transport access for the area generally improves throughout the whole
period, particularly after 2026.
In the west car access sees a steep decline up to 2026, most likely the result of the area being pushed
out of being able to reach the city centre in a 30-minute trip. There are modest improvements after
2026 overall, with some areas seeing more significant gains. Public transport access improvements
mostly occur after 2026.
In the south there are widespread declines in car access up to 2026, with some subsequent
improvement. Public transport improvements are generally modest throughout the whole 30-year
period, with only isolated areas of significant increases.
These trends are illustrated in the maps below:
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These accessibility projections highlight a significant unevenness to future employment accessibility and
a growing polarisation of access to employment in the future. By 2046 more than a million people will be
living in the western and southern parts of Auckland, nearly half the regions population. However, these
areas see relatively little improvement in their access to employment over time, particularly by private
vehicle. The wider implications of these areas being at least partly excluded from the benefits of Aucklands
expanding employment base over the next 30 years are potentially significant, particularly given they
include parts of Auckland with higher levels of deprivation, as well as a number of key future urban growth
areas.
Part of the decline in access to employment by car is related to trips destined for the city centre and is
not unexpected due to the significant constraints on increasing private vehicle access to this location.
However, there are also major challenges for trips accessing jobs in the south, especially to the Airport
area.
Accessibility between businesses is an important consideration for economic productivity and for the
movement of services and freight especially during the weekday inter-peak period when many of
these on the clock trips occur. The graph below tracks how the proportion and number of jobs within a
30-minute private vehicle travel time of the average job changes over the next 30 years:
46
The number of jobs reachable between businesses in the inter-peak period grows at a moderate but steady
rate over the next 30 years. This is due to overall employment growth outweighing the impacts of a steady
increase in inter-peak congestion. Parts of Auckland seeing particular improvements include the Airport up
to 2026 and for areas in the northwest after 2026. These localised improvements appear strongly linked to
major projected employment growth in these locations.
Overall the accessibility findings highlight the transport challenges in providing for increasingly
concentrated employment growth coupled with widespread dispersed population growth. This distribution
of projected future growth appears particularly challenging to adequately provide for car accessibility in
the south and west, yet it is in these same locations that public transport access improvements generally
appear lowest. The extent to which these challenges can be addressed through transport interventions will
need to be explored in the next stage of the project.
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5.3. Congestion
Some level of congestion is a by-product of a successful city and generally cities with very low levels of
congestion are either relatively small or in decline. However, congestion adds significant costs to doing
business and moving freight, can reduce accessibility and quality of life and is a key concern for Aucklands
travelling public. Congestion also impacts on the reliability of travel, adding costs by forcing travellers to
add extra time to their journey to allow for the potential of delay.
Analysis of the APTN highlights an increase in congestion over the next 20 years, with a subsequent
reduction after 2036. In 2036 analysis suggests just under a third of travel time in the morning peak will
be spent in congested conditions. While peak time congestion is projected to reduce from 2036 to 2046,
inter-peak congestion continues to increase. By 2036, around 22% of inter-peak travel (an average of
conditions between 9am and 3pm) is expected to be in congested conditions, influenced by a spreading of
peak period conditions continuing later into the morning and beginning earlier in the afternoon.
Congestion is expected to particularly impact on the movement of freight. Time spent in congested
conditions on the strategic freight network is forecast to increase by 45% by 2036. Inter-peak congestion
on the strategic freight network is expected to double by 2036, reaching current peak period conditions.
In contrast, a key success of the APTN is that the impact of congestion on public transport at peak times
is projected to decrease over time, due to an increased proportion of public transport trips being taken
either on rapid transit services (e.g. rail and busways) or on bus services that utilise bus lanes. Projected
congestion levels are shown in the graph below:
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Modelling analysis of volume to capacity ratios, which provide a good indication of congestion levels,
suggest that congestion problems will be experienced most on the motorway network. By 2046 in the AM
peak, most of the motorway network is projected to experience some level of congestion (indicated by
the coloured plots on the maps below) with some areas experiencing severe congestion (indicated by red
and black). Much of the increase in peak congestion occurs before 2026 and either stabilises or improves
towards the end of the 30-year period.
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Outside the motorway network congestion is generally limited to specific locations during the AM peak,
although it is important to note that the strategic modelling tools are likely to under-estimate localised
congestion off the motorway network.
The projected increase in inter-peak congestion occurs almost exclusively on the motorway network. By
2036, inter-peak congestion is forecast to be as widespread on the motorway network as the current
morning peak. Subsequent performance improvements do occur out to 2046.
The impact of congestion and unreliability is likely to be particularly pronounced for commercial and
freight travel, which generally cannot rely on a public transport alternative and occurs mostly during the
inter-peak period. Given the forecast congestion on the motorway network, unreliability will particularly
impact on strategic freight movements, including freight to and from the ports and airports along with
inter-regional freight movement.
Furthermore, with nearly three-quarters of daily trips in 2046 projected to be made by private vehicles, the
impacts of congestion and poor reliability will continue to be felt by the majority of travelling Aucklanders
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Public transport mode share is projected to increase steadily over time, with morning peak share lifting
from 7% of all trips in 2013 to 15% by 2046. This would give Auckland a higher public transport mode
share than Perth and Brisbane had in 2011, but lower than the mode shares of Sydney and Melbourne in
2011. For vehicular journeys to work in the AM peak, public transport has a higher share, growing from
13% in 2013 to 29% in 2046. It is notable that most of this increase occurs between 2013 and 2026, with
a slower level of modal shift after 2026.
The importance of public transport in serving longer trips to major centres is further illustrated through the
share of all personal distance travelled. In this case, public transports share travelled increases from 11% in
the 2013 morning peak to 19% in 2046. Due to their short distance, active modes account for around 1%
of travel by distance.
Mode share growth up to 2026 appears to be focused on trips from the central area heading towards the
city centre and its immediate surrounds. After 2026 the most significant growth is focused in the far north
and northwest areas. Growth in the share of journeys taken by public transport to, from and within the
south is limited throughout the 30-year period. Mode share growth for trips heading to the city centre
and its surrounds slows down considerably after 2026, with the most significant growth by destination
occurring for trips to the Airport and the northwest.
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A key constraint on public transport mode share growth will be capacity constraints, where the level
of demand cannot be provided for by the planned level of service. Projected public transport capacity
constraints (indicated by situations where the volume of demand nears or exceeds service capacity) are
highlighted in red and black below.
Typically, these constraints should be able to be resolved by providing additional services (i.e. operating
more buses, trains or ferries) but in some cases this may be challenging due to infrastructural constraints
such as the number of buses on particular corridors exceeding feasible levels. The main locations where
simply providing more services may be challenging are on key approaches to the city centre from the
north, west and south. The Auckland strategic transport model does not fully reflect the impacts of these
capacity constraints, but more detailed analysis suggests a significant decline in bus speeds on busy routes
over the next 30 years. If this is not addressed, it is likely to negatively impact on mode share growth.
Overall, the APTN analysis highlights that public transport mode share growth needs to make a greater
contribution to reducing congestion, particularly for long trips where people using private vehicles are
utilising highly congested motorway corridors. Notably, the analysis suggests that rail service levels
included in the APTN do not appear to be a sufficiently attractive transport option to be driving major
mode share change for areas served in the south and west.
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Part 6
Next Steps
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The analysis to date has highlighted some key issues for the next phase of the project to examine in more
detail:
Objective
In addition to the issues outlined in section 5 above, there are some areas where the initial model-based
analysis has not been sufficient to determine the full extent of future network problems. An example of
this is freight transport, where further work will be needed in the next phase of the project to more clearly
identify the issues and options that exist.
The next phase of the project will also include an assessment of the impact that different future scenarios
for population growth, land use projections and technology futures may have on the project objectives.
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Endnotes
& References
60
Rosenthal, S., and Strange, W. (2004), Evidence on the nature and sources of agglomeration economies,
pp. 2119-2171 in Cities and Geography, Volume 4, edited by V Henderson and J Thisse. Elsevier.
Mar, D. C, and Daniel, J G. (2009), Agglomeration elasticities in New Zealand, NZ Transport Agency
Research Report 376. Available at: https://www.nzta.govt.nz/assets/resources/research/reports/376/
docs/376.pdf
Nunns, P. (2014), Population weighted densities in New Zealand and Australian cities: a comparative data
set.
Houghton Consulting (2011), Auckland congestion international comparisons, prepared for Auckland
Council. Auckland data from NZTA/Beca Travel Time Surveys. Australian data from Austroads: http://algin.
net/austroads/site/index.asp?id=5
Richard Paling Consulting (2014) Census Journey to Work Patterns in the Auckland Region, Report for
Ministry of Transport
MRCagney (2015), Benchmarking public transport and car accessibility in Auckland, Report for Auckland
Council
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Auckland Profile initial results from the 2013 census (page 6), available online at:
http://www.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/EN/planspoliciesprojects/reports/Documents/
aucklandprofileinitialresults2013census201405.pdf
12
In the June 2014 year Aucklands population grew by 34,000 (2.3 percent), in the June 2015 year
population grew by 43,500 (2.9 percent), to reach 1.57 million - Subnational Population Estimates: At
30 June 2015, available online at: http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/population/estimates_and_
projections/SubnationalPopulationEstimates_HOTPAt30Jun15/Commentary.aspx
13
This projection, known as Scenario I9 has been developed by Auckland Council and Auckland
Transport. It reflects the likely location and timing of growth in newly urbanised areas (as outlined in the
Future Urban Land Supply Strategy). However, Scenario I9 does not reflect the Proposed Auckland Unitary
Plans zoning and development controls within the existing urban area as these are currently being decided
upon as part of the independent hearings process for that Plan. Given this, the land use assumptions do
not imply wider endorsement outside of the project.
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Ministry of Transport (2014) National Freight Demand Study, available online at http://www.transport.
govt.nz/assets/Uploads/Research/Documents/National-Freight-Demand-Study-Mar-2014.pdf
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http://www.transport.govt.nz/assets/Uploads/Sea/Documents/FIGS-June-2015.pdf
22
http://www.port-tauranga.co.nz/images.php?oid=3009
Rive, G. (2015), Public transport and the next generation. NZ Transport Agency research report 569.
Available at: http://www.nzta.govt.nz/assets/resources/research/reports/569/docs/569.pdf
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