An Overview of CUBE Land


CUBE LAND

CUBE Land is a powerful economic land-use forecasting software, which allows the user to model the interaction between real estate markets and transportation systems.

Image 1 - Model Structure

CUBE Land can be added to any existing CUBE application as a new program step in CUBE Base, which also provides the embedded ArcGIS interface for defining model inputs as well as mapping and reporting model outputs.

The key benefits of using CUBE Land as the tool for land-use modelling are:

CUBE Land is based upon Dr. Francisco Martinez’s highly regarded and innovative MUSSA II model (Martinez, F. “Towards a Land-Use and Transport Interaction Framework” in Hensher and Button, Handbook of Transport Modelling, Elsevier).

CUBE Land’s  main features can be summarized in the following five aspects:

Image 2 - LUTI representation

CUBE Land provides a streamlined interface for developing transport and land-use interaction models (LUTI).

CUBE LAND – methodology

CUBE Land is based on a “bid-choice” framework, combining the “bid-rent” theory with discrete choice models. CUBE Land consists of three subsequent and interconnected models:

A real estate market equilibrium between suppliers and consumers is determined, subject to bounds, constraints, restrictions, and policy assumptions.

CUBE Land incorporates a clear behavioral logic to determine the equilibrium: real estate properties are occupied by the household/firm willing to pay the highest price, whilst developers maximize profits when deciding what type of buildings to provide.

Location externalities and economies of scale are incorporated via a feedback within the equilibrium loop, simulating the interaction between consumers and suppliers.

Image 3 - Relations between/within models and feedback loop

CUBE LAND – LUTI

CUBE Land can be configured to implement any of a number of widely-known approaches for integrating travel demand and land-use model components. You can produce an equilibrium forecast based on automatic feedback between land-use and transportation models, introduce time lags between sub-models, or manually control the interaction between model components.

Household and firm bid/rent functions consider transportation service quality:

 Both of these aspects are marked-segment specific, therefore depending on the household type (income and size) and on the firm industry category.

Accessibility and attractiveness can be measured with any user specified formulation from the transport model skim matrices and other data.

CUBE LAND – Input Data

The input data structure and formulations are flexible in CUBE Land, depending on the specific model characteristics and data availability. With input and configuration files, you specify the required information and the elements that define the city and market that CUBE Land simulates. Specifically, you define and categorize the zones, the agents and the properties:

Zonal input data can be stored in attribute tables of polygon GIS layers. The level of resolution depends on the zone’s arbitrary size (parcels, blocks/block groups, Traffic Analysis Zones – TAZ, census tracts, zip codes, etc.). Other than geodatabases, input formats are TEXT Files and DBF tables.

CUBE LAND – Outputs

The outputs from CUBE Land are DBF files that can be easily post-processed within the CUBE environment to calculate additional indicators and display them to communicate more effectively by visualizing outputs in CUBE GIS or ArcGIS directly.

Typical outputs at the equilibrium condition are:

CUBE LAND – Applications

At the base of any transport model, there is the underline concept that transport needs are induced by the need to perform activities. Transport demand and supply depend on the location of activities and land-use within the study area. Vice-versa, the transportation system does influence the activity system and the land-use. This creates a cycle loop between land-use and transport costs.

CUBE Land, integrated in the CUBE environment, is the tool developed to analyze these interactions, with the following three main objectives:

With CUBE Land you can:

 

 

Image 4 - Household and Firms variations due to the opening of a new underground line (Milan - Italy)

 

CUBE Land has been successfully applied and tested around the world to analyze several different policies and projects. Here are some examples: