Traffic Counts: Cordon Count, Quays Count DCC

Every November Dublin City Council (DCC) conducts traffic counts at 33 locations on entry points into the city centre around a 'cordon' formed by the Royal and Grand Canals. As the name suggests, the cordon has been chosen to ensure (as far as possible) that any person entering the City Centre from outside must pass through one of the 33 locations where the surveys are undertaken. In addition, every May there is a wider traffic count survey carried out at approximately 60 locations where in addition to the canal cordon locations, further counts are carried out at bridges along the River Liffey and points such as Parnell Street and St. Stephens Green.

These traffic counts provide a reliable measurement of the modal distribution of persons travelling into, and out of, Dublin City on a year on year comparable basis. The data collected is divided into the various transport modes allowing us to better understand the changing usage trends in cycling, pedestrian and various vehicle types.

Resources include a map with the 33 locations on the Cordon where data is annually collected. All 33 cordon points are on routes for general traffic into the City Centre, while 22 of the cordon points are on bus routes into the City. The numbers of people using Bus, Luas, DART and suburban rail services to enter the City Centre are collated from each of the various service providers and an Annual Monitoring Report is prepared by the National Transport Authority.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Nilai
Language
Date Created 2018-03-10
Date Updated 2021-10-22
Year Updated 2021
Date Range
Target Audience
Category
Related Datasets
Landing Page https://data.smartdublin.ie/dataset/traffic-volumes
Versi 1.0
Update Frequency
Was Revision Of
Geographical Bounding Box
Region
Spatial Projection
Conforms to
Contact Person Dublin City Council
Contact Person Email Dublin City Council
Data Owner Dublin City Council
Data Owner Email Dublin City Council
Completeness
Geospatial
H&H Category Health & Wellbeing Statistics
Age
LGMA Topic
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