Transporation Development
The Transportation Development Section reviews transportation
issues for discretionary projects including
right-of-way requirements, parking, access and other Land Development
Code
transportation
issues. It also reviews transportation impact studies as part of the environmental
review process. See additional information that may be helpful in the Planning
Department's Transportation
Planning section.
Documents
| Subject |
Description |
Revision
Date |
PDF Size |
| Traffic Impact Study Manual |
Includes procedure for determining the type of traffic impact study needed
and requirements for performing traffic impact studies |
July 1998 |
2.94 MG |
| Trip
Generation Manual |
Information about vehicular traffic that is
generated by different land uses. |
May 2003 |
310K |
| More Documents |
Additional documents can be found in the Planning Department's Transportation
Planning Library. |
N/A |
N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
- How can I determine how much traffic my project will generate?
See the City's
Trip Generation Manual.
- How can I determine my projects's parking requirements?
Check Section 142 (Chapter
14, Article 2, Division 5) of the City's Land
Development Code. This section also describes required dimensions
of parking spaces, drive aisles and other aspects of designing the project's
onsite
parking.
- How can I determine whether my project will require a transportation impact
study?
Refer to Figure 1 in the City's Traffic Impact
Study. (Hard copies are available for sale at the Development Services
Department's Publications Counter on the 2nd
Floor of the Development Services Center.) The rule of thumb is that
if the project
would
be
expected
to generate more
than
1,000
average
daily
trips
(according to the City's
Trip Generation Manual) or 500 average daily trips if the project
would require a community plan amendment, a transportation impact study is
required.
- How can I submit an "adequate" traffic impact study on
its first submittal?
Follow the checklist in Appendix 1 of the City's
Traffic Impact Study and also scope the study with the Transportation Development
staff prior to beginning the study. Reach early agreement with staff on such
issues
as geographic scope of the study, locations where new traffic counts will
be needed, how to handle any computer modeling, how to handle any proposed
phasing, and how to address any unusual conditions.
- How many review cycles does it typically take to get a traffic impact study
approved?
This depends on several factors such as how well the study was scoped, how
complex the issues are, etc. But, please contact Transportation Development
to arrange a meeting if the study is not close to approval by the 3rd review.
Contact Us
Ann French Gonsalves, R.T.E.
619-446-5294
agonsalves@sandiego.gov
Labib Qasem, R.T.E.
619-446-5358
lqasem@sandiego.gov
|