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Dynamic vulnerability of urban road networks

Urban RoadsRoad transport networks are vital to the economic and social health of our society. Poorly performing networks lead to significant costs and adverse environmental and health impacts. This project will develop methods and tools to predict the effects of network failure through incident-related congestion at bottlenecks (e.g. congestion from accidents, vehicle breakdowns, road works, lane blockages and road closures) and to suggest remedial action plans in the case of bottleneck formation. Incident related congestion is responsible for more than 50% of the ($9.4B p.a.) cost of congestion in Australia's major cities.












This project is funded by the Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Project scheme for two years (2010-2012).

For further information, please contact Michael Taylor