Overcoming national challenges
In 2018, the Ministry developed the Transport Outcomes Framework. This sets out a new direction for New Zealand, increasing the focus on mode-neutrality to improve the long-term sustainability of the transport network. For the project to be successful, it is important for the model to respond to the needs of all individuals.
We created a vision with a set of design principles for building the simulation and engaged with key stakeholders over a three-month period to understand requirements and priority policy questions centred around five connected outcomes – inclusive access, economic prosperity, healthy and safe people, environmental sustainability, and resilience. The process highlighted a number of potential use cases to inform the model’s development and its value.
Modelling travel behaviours
Traditional methods to tackle similar national and local challenges often involves making sense of aggregated data. This provides high-level, sensible estimates for transport service performance, but limits how we can explore, slice, and integrate the data. Agents represent real people in a given area with daily activity plans including the way they interact with the transport network. Typically, ABMs tend to simulate the interactions of individuals on a smaller scale, such as within a city. In New Zealand, however, we needed a much broader approach.