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doorgaands

Doorgaands is a term in Dutch urban planning referring to through-traffic corridors. It designates routes intended for vehicles that pass through a city or district without terminating there, as opposed to streets that primarily serve local access. The concept is used to categorize road networks and to frame policy measures aimed at managing through traffic. The term is most common in the Netherlands and Flanders; in English, it is often translated as through-traffic corridors or through routes.

The word derives from doorgaan, meaning to go through, with doorgaand as adjective “through-going” and doorgaands

Policy applications: In practice, managing doorgaands involves balancing mobility and livability: building bypasses or ring roads

Impacts and debates: Advocates argue that focusing through-traffic management improves safety, reduces congestion on local streets,

See also: Through traffic, traffic calming, bypass (road).

as
a
plural
noun.
It
is
typically
found
in
municipal
planning
documents,
road
safety
analyses,
and
transport
policy
discussions.
to
divert
through
traffic
away
from
urban
centers,
introducing
traffic
restrictions
in
sensitive
areas,
implementing
traffic-calming
measures
on
local
streets,
and
configuring
street
networks
to
minimize
opportunities
for
through
trips.
It
is
a
framing
device
for
decisions
about
road
classification,
capacity,
and
access
control.
and
supports
efficient
regional
transport.
Critics
warn
that
diverting
through
traffic
can
displace
problems
to
other
corridors,
potentially
harming
neighborhoods
along
alternative
routes,
and
that
bypasses
may
encourage
urban
sprawl
if
not
paired
with
complementary
land-use
planning.