1. QUESTIONS
Low Traffic Neighbourhoods (LTNs) are area-wide measures that use ‘modal filters’ to restrict through motor traffic on residential streets (Supplemental Information 1 provides an example). The aim is to discourage driving while simultaneously creating safer and more pleasant walking and cycling environments.
Some critics have raised concerns that LTNs could increase total car kilometres travelled by forcing drivers to use more circuitous routes for some trips. Survey evidence from Outer London does not suggest this, with LTN residents instead tending to spend more time walking and/or cycling each week, and less time travelling by car (Aldred and Goodman 2021). This survey evidence is, however, limited by small sample sizes.
This study therefore used annual vehicle mileage data to examine the impact of new LTNs on car/van travel by residents in the London Borough of Lambeth.
2. METHODS
The north of Lambeth is covered by controlled parking zones, with residents requiring a permit for on-street car/van parking on their local streets. Lambeth Council provided us with numberplate plus home postcode data for active ‘resident’ and ‘disabled’ parking permits as of 1st March 2018, 1st March 2020, and 1st March 2023. See Supplemental Information 2 for details.
Lambeth implemented five LTNs between June and September 2020, and then no further LTNs as of March 2023. Four of the 2020 LTNs are covered by controlled parking zones, and in scope for this study (Figure 1).
Residential postcodes contain around 60 individuals. Lambeth contains 3006 residential postcodes that a) have been in use and covered by controlled parking zones across the period March 2018 to March 2023, b) lie outside of Central London,[1] and c) were given as the home address for at least one parking permit holder in March 2018, 2020, or 2023. We divided these postcodes into three non-overlapping groups (see also Figure 1):
-
‘Inside the LTNs’: postcode centroid inside one of the four study LTNs.
-
‘Near the LTNs’: postcode centroid <200m crow-flies from the edge of a study LTN.[2]
-
‘Control area’: postcode centroid ≥200m crow-flies from the edge of a study LTN.
These groups generally had similar demographic and socio-economic characteristics (Table 1).
In the UK, all cars and vans that are three or more years old must undergo an ‘Ministry of Transport (MOT) test’ every 12 months. This includes recording vehicle mileage on the odometer. Among cars/vans with an active permit as of 1st March 2020, we identified 8575 cars/vans in scope for our analysis of ‘pre-LTN’ mileage, following the criteria summarised in Figure 2. For these vehicles we compared odometer readings between successive annual MOTs in the window 1st March 2018 to 1st March 2020, and used this to generate mean past-year daily kilometres before the implementation of LTNs. Similarly, among cars/vans with an active permit as of 1st March 2023, we identified 10,281 cars/vans in scope for our analysis of ‘post-LTN’ mileage. For these we compared odometer readings between successive annual MOTs in the window 1st March 2021 to 1st March 2023, to generate mean past-year daily kilometres after the implementation of LTNs. See Supplemental Information 2 for more details.
Finally, among cars/vans with an active permit as of 1st March 2018, we used equivalent methods to examine past-year driving for 7367 cars/vans in the window 1st March 2016 to 1st March 2018. We did this to examine whether any pre/post changes observed between 2020 and 2023 might be a continuation of longer-term trends.
Our primary analysis included all cars/vans. Secondary analyses 1) restricted the sample to ‘stable households’ with the same vehicle present at the same address in both 2020 and 2023, and 2) stratified by small-area deprivation, as defined by the Index of Multiple Deprivation.
3. FINDINGS
Between 2020 and 2023, the total number of active parking permits increased by 9.0% inside the LTNs (from 3546 to 3866); by 8.7% near the LTNs (2917 to 3172); and by 10.1% in the control area (11,774 to 12,958).[3]
The pre/post change in mean past-year driving was -0.7km/day among residents living inside the LTNs (from 20.3km/day to 19.6km/day), and +0.6km/day among residents in the control area (20.4km/day to 21.0km/day: see Table 2). This corresponds to a difference-in-differences effect of -1.3km/day (95%CI -2.4 to -0.3) in the LTN versus control areas, or a 6.4% decrease in relative terms.
This pre/post divergence between the LTN and control areas was not just a continuation of pre-existing trends. On the contrary, when comparing 2018 and 2020 permit holders, there was no evidence of a difference between the areas inside the LTNs versus the control areas (Figure 3).
A pre/post difference between the LTN and control areas was also seen in the subsample of ‘stable households’ with parking permits in both 2020 and 2023 (difference-in-differences effect -2.3km/day, 95%CI -3.9 to -0.7: Table 3). This suggests that the decrease in driving observed inside the LTNs was not simply due to ‘residential self-selection’, whereby households that drove a lot had left the LTNs and/or households that drove less had moved in. Instead, it indicates that existing residents were changing their behaviour and starting to drive less.
The pre/post difference between the LTN and control areas was observed both in more affluent areas and more deprived areas, with no evidence that the magnitude of the effect differed (difference-in-differences point estimates -1.5km/day in more affluent areas and -1.1km/day in more deprived areas, p=0.67 for heterogeneity between these strata: see Supplemental Information 3).
There was no evidence of a pre/post difference in the areas near the LTNs versus the control area (difference-in-differences effect -0.3km/day, 95%CI -1.4 to +0.9: Table 2).
In summary, our findings suggest that residents in Lambeth started driving less once their area became an LTN. Notably, our outcome measure captures total past-year driving, including trips that the Lambeth LTNs are less likely to impact (e.g., inter-city trips, or travel outside London). It is plausible that for shorter and more local trips the relative decrease in LTN residents’ driving would be greater than the estimated 6% decrease in total past-year driving. This suggests that, in Lambeth and other similar inner-city areas, widespread roll-out of LTNs could make an important contribution towards reducing how much residents drive, and towards reducing local volumes of motor traffic.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was approved by the Lambeth Information Governance team and received University Ethics Approval from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (Project ID 27801). This study was not externally funded, being conducted with discretionary research time. AL is supported by the NIHR School for Public Health Research. We are grateful to the following Officers at Lambeth Council: Luuk van Kessel for helping set up the data sharing agreement with Lambeth Council; and Shievan Charles and Beth Cramman for preparing the datasets that Lambeth Council shared. Lambeth Council had no role in the design, analysis, or write-up of this study, nor any say over whether the results should be published. AG lives in Lambeth, outside of the study area.
We introduced this restriction in recognition of the very different transport trends seen in Central London versus Inner London during the Covid-19 pandemic. Central London was defined as London’s ‘Central Activity Zone’. None of Lambeth’s LTNs lie inside the Central Activity Zone. The rest of Lambeth lies in ‘Inner London’.
A 200m threshold was chosen as a distance that generated a roughly similar sample size in the ‘near the LTNs’ area as opposed to the ‘inside the LTNs’ area, i.e. providing a reasonable sample size but not ‘diluting’ any potential effect of living near an LTN by including postcodes further away. Our findings were similar if we used a 300m or 500m buffer instead of a 200m buffer to define areas ‘near the LTNs’. Note that this category included postcodes on surrounding boundary roads, i.e., roads that might plausibly see re-routed traffic from vehicles unable to pass through the LTN. It also included areas adjacent to the newly-created LTNs that were already low-traffic, having been designed to have no through routes (e.g., the Somerleyton Road/Loughborough Park triangle near Railton LTN, or St Martin’s estate near Tulse Hill LTN). The category of areas ‘near the LTNs’ used in the present study therefore differs from our focus in Aldred et al. (2021) where we specifically sought to identify areas around LTN boundary roads. Note also that this group does not include areas <200m from the edge of a Lambeth LTN but in a different borough, as we only had controlled parking zone data for Lambeth.
Interpreting these changes is not straightforward without information on population change, which currently is not available at the small-area level beyond 2020. However, the similarity between the LTN and control areas suggests that the Lambeth LTNs have not seen a notable drop in car/van ownership. This contrasts with the 6% decrease in car/van ownership after two years observed in the longer-established LTNs in Waltham Forest (Goodman, Urban, and Aldred 2020). It is possible that any effects on car/van ownership in Lambeth have been slowed by 1) people being more reluctant to give up a car during the Covid-19 pandemic and/or 2) people waiting to see if Lambeth’s LTNs would be made permanent (unlike Waltham Forest, Lambeth initially introduced its four LTNs on a trial basis, and the decisions to make the schemes permanent were only announced between December 2021 and August 2022). Another potentially relevant contextual factor is that car ownership levels started from a lower baseline in inner-London Lambeth than in outer-London Waltham Forest. Future follow-up studies will be valuable to see if effects on car/van ownership do emerge in Lambeth over time.