Level of Service: Design Standards, Imposed Car Dependence, and the Production of Urban Space in the Capitalist State
dc.contributor.author | Heltzel, Will Vincent | en |
dc.contributor.committeechair | Bieri, David Stephan | en |
dc.contributor.committeemember | Vinsel, Lee | en |
dc.contributor.committeemember | Wagle, Paroma Subodh | en |
dc.contributor.department | Urban Affairs and Planning | en |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-06-04T08:05:49Z | en |
dc.date.available | 2025-06-04T08:05:49Z | en |
dc.date.issued | 2025-06-03 | en |
dc.description.abstract | Transportation scholarship has become increasingly critical of design standards and engineering methods that promote car-dependent development patterns in American cities. Level of Service (LOS) is a design standard that has received scrutiny for its misapplication to urban streets, accommodating highway-like traffic flow where local service and accessibility should be a priority. Combining the work of contemporary planning and engineering researchers, Marxist urban theorists, and critical theorists Henri Lefebvre and Michel Foucault, this paper understands such design standards as forms of knowledge that reproduce power structures of capitalism. The paper focuses on an in-depth historical analysis of three watershed moments of federal decision making that helped establish and reproduce a car-centric discourse of urban transportation in the United States. Using this analysis, the paper describes how the widely accepted use of LOS as a quality measure for urban streets acts as mechanism of the capitalist state's spatial logic of managing urbanization around production and consumption to reproduce its own dominance. | en |
dc.description.abstractgeneral | Level of Service (LOS) is a design standard that is used in the design and maintenance of roads and streets across the United States. Expressed as an A through F letter grade, a roadway with an LOS closer to A is one where cars can move quickly and freely without interruption. Seeking higher levels of service in densely developed areas has contributed to the American phenomenon wherein wide, high-speed, unwelcoming and dangerous roads dominate the built landscape of urban and suburban communities. This paper looks at federal policy of the mid-20th century to understand how this logic of designing cities came into being. Drawing on multiple transportation researchers and theorists of urban planning and sociology, this paper argues that the use of LOS in urban areas fits within the capitalist logic of designing cities wherein constant growth is valued above all else, including the safety, convenience, and beauty of a city designed for more than just car owners. | en |
dc.description.degree | Master of Urban and Regional Planning | en |
dc.format.medium | ETD | en |
dc.identifier.other | vt_gsexam:44068 | en |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10919/135040 | en |
dc.language.iso | en | en |
dc.publisher | Virginia Tech | en |
dc.rights | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International | en |
dc.rights.uri | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ | en |
dc.subject | Transportation planning | en |
dc.subject | Level of Service | en |
dc.subject | design standards | en |
dc.subject | capitalism | en |
dc.subject | social space | en |
dc.title | Level of Service: Design Standards, Imposed Car Dependence, and the Production of Urban Space in the Capitalist State | en |
dc.type | Thesis | en |
thesis.degree.discipline | Urban and Regional Planning | en |
thesis.degree.grantor | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University | en |
thesis.degree.level | masters | en |
thesis.degree.name | Master of Urban and Regional Planning | en |