Martin J. H. Mogridge

Martin Mogridge (December 2, 1940 – February 29, 2000) was a British transport researcher based in London. He proposed the Lewis–Mogridge position that traffic varies in relation to the potential avenues of travel available, thus arguing that adding new roads to a transport network was potentially counter productive (see Braess's paradox) if a wider knowledge of local transport routes was not applied.

Works

 * Estimation of Regional and Sub-regional Household Income Distributions and Their Use in Demand Forecasting, 1972
 * Travel in Towns: Jam Yesterday, Jam Today and Jam Tomorrow, 1990
 * Metropolis Or Region, 1994
 * The Rejuvenation of Inner London, 1996
 * The self-defeating nature of urban road capacity policy, 1997