Urban accessibility is commonly evaluated using static spatial indicators, which assume stable travel conditions throughout the day. Road congestion, network saturation, and service variability change the function and experience of the built environment (BE). This study tests the Temporal City Framework (TCF) by examining how time of day (TOD) reshapes urban accessibility and travel behaviour with varying levels of congestion. Using 30,288 trip records from the 2022 US National Household Travel Survey (NHTS), duration is operationalised as a sixth dimension of the BE. A time-normalised impedance metric, measured in minutes per mile (MPM), is used that captures realised congestion independently of distance. Temporal impedance (TI) varies strongly with TOD, with substantially higher MPM during peak and midday periods than at night. Compared with nighttime conditions, midday travel requires approximately 19% more time per mile. This indicates a measurable contraction in functional accessibility under identical BE conditions. The TI model outperforms duration-only models, with impedance remaining dominant when both measures are included. These results support interpreting duration as a structural dimension of urban accessibility. TI significantly increases the relative likelihood of active and public transport compared to private cars, even after accounting for absolute trip duration. Hired transport modes (taxi and ride-hailing services) are most prevalent at night, reflecting a greater reliance on on-demand services outside regular daytime schedules. This study tests duration as a structural dimension of the BE by operationalising time-normalised TI. Associations are interpreted as trip-level behavioural constraints rather than causal effects. Planning frameworks based on static travel times systematically misrepresent exposure, equity, and travel mode feasibility. Time-stratified accessibility metrics should therefore be integrated into transport and land-use evaluation and associated policies.
Arif et al. (Fri,) studied this question.