Scenario Planning Model
The SCAG Scenario Planning Model (SPM) is a comprehensive web-based land use sketch planning tool for scenario development, modeling, and data organization developed to support a collaborative and seamless local and regional plan development process.
SPM is a web-based scenario development, modeling, and data organization tool developed to facilitate informed and collaborative planning among counties/subregions, local jurisdictions, other stakeholders, and the public. Built on open-source software platforms, SPM includes a suite of tools and analytical engines that help to quickly illustrate alternative plans and policies and to estimate their transportation, environmental, fiscal, public health, and community impacts. Moreover, SPM provides a common data framework within which local planning efforts can be easily integrated and synced with regional plans.
Background
Senate Bill (SB) 375, which was passed by the California Legislature and signed into law by the Governor in September 2008, requires each Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) to develop a Sustainable Communities Strategy (SCS) for reducing carbon emissions. Under SB375, each MPO needs to provide the public with the necessary modeling information and tools for an informed assessment of the issues and policy choices in the development of SCS. Accordingly, in Spring 2011, SCAG developed the Local Sustainability Planning Tool (LSPT), a GIS-based sketch planning tool that allows users to create land use scenarios and analyze their impacts. Provided with preliminary scenarios of their planning areas, local planners were able to create, modify, and compare different land use scenarios and their subsequent impacts on vehicle ownership, vehicle miles traveled (VMT), mode use and GHG emissions. This allowed the local government participation in the development of the 2012 -2035 RTP/SCS to be far more fruitful than it otherwise would have been.
When SCAG initiated the 2016-2040 Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable Communities Strategy (RTP/SCS) process, additional functional and analytical needs were identified to better foster the creation of a highly realistic and implementable SCS through a “bottom-up” approach. After the thorough review of scenario planning models and tools in practice, SCAG joined other major Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs) in California – Sacramento Area Council of Governments (SACOG) and San Diego Association of Government (SANDAG) – in the enhancement and customization of the open-source version of UrbanFootprint . In order to make the customized tool useful to subregions and local jurisdictions, SCAG formed a Working Group in 2013 that included representatives from all counties and subregions in the SCAG region to serve as an advisory group on functional and operational aspects of the model. The Working Group offered an invaluable source of support and guidance in the development and implementation of UrbanFootprint based SCAG Scenario Planning Model (SPM).
Primary Purpose And Current Use
The primary purpose of SPM is to enhance the Region’s ability to address complex issues and evolving challenges by providing better information about alternative future scenarios and by building an improved linkage between local and regional planning. Within SCAG’s integrated modeling and forecasting system, SPM serves as a conduit for the delivery of up-to-date and locally vetted data and plans to key SCAG models by: delivering locally vetted data and plans to key SCAG models to ensure that regional plans are consistent with local data and policy inputs; and providing directional and order-of-magnitude impacts of local land use and policy decisions that will assist in the development of regional plans and associated scenario analysis.
SPM was initially deployed as two separate web services – SPM Data Management (SPM-DM) and SPM Scenario Development and Analysis (SPM-SD). SPM-DM tool was released in late 2017 to all local jurisdictions in the SCAG region to support the 2020 Connect SoCal (or 2020-2045 RTP/SCS) process by providing a common platform to share, review, update and disseminate data between SCAG and local jurisdictions. SPM-DM was instrumental in the timely and efficient review of and decision on important plan datasets and had supported in building a local-regional database connection until it was sunsetted in 2022. SPM-SD tool incorporates multiple analytical modules that produce a variety of critical metrics to inform and envision possible futures under different demographic growth, land use, and transportation scenarios. SPM-SD has primarily been used for regional plan development and analysis activities and remains to play an important role in facilitating scenario creation and editing with advanced analytic capabilities.
SPM provides a powerful and dynamic scenario creation, modeling, and data organization framework designed to facilitate more informed and collaborative planning by providing a comprehensive view of potential futures. Its suite of tools and analytic engines enable the creation and organization of local and regional data, plans and policies, facilitate scenario creation and editing, and estimate a wide range of potential benefits resulting from alternative transportation and land use strategies.
Data Development and Organization

Scenario-based planning with SPM starts with a detailed baseline assessment of the existing conditions or base “canvas” at the Scenario Planning Zone (SPZ) level. The SPZs are the minimum unit of scenario planning and analysis that SCAG developed by grouping parcels of uniform or compatible land uses while maintaining manageable size for capturing local land use benefits on transportation, varied by development density and intensity.
SPM streamlines the development of the base canvas through scripts and processes that normalize data of varying quality, type and scale from a wide range of sources, including land cover and environmental data, demographic characteristics, roadway and transit that provide the foundation for analysis by SPM’s various analysis engines.
Scenario Development

The base canvas provides the context for scenario painting and editing, and subsequent analysis. Once the base canvas is set, scenarios can be created in two ways: translation of existing plans, and ‘painting’ or editing of new or existing plans or scenarios.
Existing Plan Translation
SPM analyzes existing plans or scenarios at any scale based on their key characteristics such as density, mix of uses, and street connectivity. It then translates each geographic area (e.g., parcel, TAZ, or SPZ) of the input plan into one of the model’s common language of Place Types and Building Types. Place Types represent a full range of potential development types and patterns, from urban mixed-use centers, to employment and industrial areas, to standard suburban residential areas that can be seen across the SCAG region. Each Place Type is composed of a mix of different building types and represents a unique set of assumptions that facilitate scenario modeling and testing at a variety of scales. This allows SCAG to integrate local plans together into a common regional fabric of land use and transportation plan and to perform consistent analysis on individual plans or combinations thereof.
Scenario Painting and Editing
SPM’s web-based scenario painter, that includes a suite of selection and viewing tools, allows the user to edit or build upon a translated plan or scenario, or create new scenarios from scratch by applying Place Types to the landscape (see Figure below). In addition to various spatial data layers available via SPM’s graphical user interface, ranging from parcel level land use, to statewide resource areas and farmland, the web- based scenario painter can also display regularly updated data available on the web today (e.g., Google Maps, Open Street Map). SPM builds a scenario by adding the “change” or “increment” that you’ve painted on top of a base condition. The combination of the two produces what is known as the “End state” which represents what will be on the ground in the future.

Scenario Analysis

SPM analysis modules produce a wide range of inter-related metrics that allow for robust and meaningful comparisons of alternative land use and transportation scenarios. Once changes are made to the base canvas via painting or translation of existing plan, scenario core processes combine the changes or growth input with the existing conditions to create future scenarios and estimate developable land and demographic characteristics.
These scenarios then run through the model engines briefly described below to measure their performance for mobility, air quality, public health, fiscal impacts, resource consumptions, and others.

Land Consumption Engine
Land Consumption engine calculates greenfield land consumed to accommodate new growth for future scenarios. Greenfield is identified based on the assessment of the base year or existing condition. Total land consumed in the existing greenfield is then estimated by applying per unit or per employee assumptions, accounting for housing type as well as employment sector.

Fiscal Impact Engine
Fiscal Impact Engine estimates the impacts of varying forms of development on local expenditures. The current engine limits its focus to the impacts associated with new residential growth, accounting for the capital costs of new and upgraded local infrastructure, and operations and maintenance (O&M) costs to serve new and upgraded infrastructures. Cost factors vary by Land Development Category (LDC), development condition (refill or greenfield), and housing type (single family detached large lot, single family detached small lot, single family attached or multifamily).

Building Energy Engine
Building Energy Engine calculates residential and commercial building energy use, and their related costs and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, for both new and existing buildings. Within the engine, energy use is determined by three types of variables: building characteristics, climate zone, and efficiency factors. Building characteristics and climate zone determine what baseline per-residential unit or per-commercial square foot factors are used to calculate energy use. Reductions are then applied to the resulting baseline estimates to reflect the implementation of building efficiency and conservation policies into the future.

Water Engine
Water Engine calculates indoor and outdoor residential and commercial water use, and their related costs and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, for both new and existing buildings. Indoor and outdoor water use is first calculated according to baseline rates, determined by building or employment characteristics and climate zone, and then adjusted to account for the application of efficiency and conservation policies into the future.

Transportation Engine
SPM incorporates a comprehensive “sketch” travel model that produces vehicle miles traveled (VMT), mode choice, and congestion estimates for land use and transportation scenarios, as well as transportation-related costs, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and pollutant emissions. Transportation analysis capabilities within SPM are currently based on the Mixed-Use Development (MXD) trip generation model that estimates the likely degree to which a development area’s traffic generation will be reduced due to trip internalization, external walking, or transit trips. The MXD method uses land use and demographic information as well as outputs from regional transportation model to calculate trip reductions, resulting from the specific combination of factors known to be most influential in trip generation.

Public Health Engine
Public health engine measures the impact of land use patterns and urban form on physical activity-related weight and disease incidences, and respiratory impacts, as well as their related costs. Respiratory health analysis is based on overall VMT from SCAG’s regional transportation model and associated criteria air pollutant emissions from EMFAC. Health incidence and valuation assumptions for select air pollutants (PM2.5, Sox, VOC and NOx) are then applied to estimate pollution-related health incidences and costs.
Physical-activity related health incidences are calculated from California Public Health Assessment Model (C-PHAM) that uses a behavioral and exposure-based pathway approach that links the built environment with health outcomes. C-PHAM provided health outcomes include the Body Mass Index (BMI), the likelihood of being obese or having high blood pressure/heart disease/type 2 diabetes by age group.

Land Conservation Engine
SPM incorporates the Nature Conservancy’s land conservation engine that measures the impacts of change upon a detailed depiction of existing conditions on the four major themes: carbon, water, agriculture, and habitat. The terrestrial carbon storage model analyzes the impact of land use changes on carbon storage associated with natural vegetation in the landscape as well as with soil organic carbon. The water theme measures the impacts of changes to natural lands or land cover on watershed, the ground recharge potential of converted lands, water resource priority areas, and agricultural land with associated water demand. The terrestrial habitat model measures the capacity of the landscape to facilitate or inhibit species movement and the suitability of land use in an area to support terrestrial vertebrates. The agricultural model estimates the impact of land conversion on agricultural production and capacity.
Data Development and Organization

Scenario-based planning with SPM starts with a detailed baseline assessment of the existing conditions or base “canvas” at the Scenario Planning Zone (SPZ) level. The SPZs are the minimum unit of scenario planning and analysis that SCAG developed by grouping parcels of uniform or compatible land uses while maintaining manageable size for capturing local land use benefits on transportation, varied by development density and intensity.
SPM streamlines the development of the base canvas through scripts and processes that normalize data of varying quality, type and scale from a wide range of sources, including land cover and environmental data, demographic characteristics, roadway and transit that provide the foundation for analysis by SPM’s various analysis engines.
Scenario Development

The base canvas provides the context for scenario painting and editing, and subsequent analysis. Once the base canvas is set, scenarios can be created in two ways: translation of existing plans, and ‘painting’ or editing of new or existing plans or scenarios.
Existing Plan Translation
SPM analyzes existing plans or scenarios at any scale based on their key characteristics such as density, mix of uses, and street connectivity. It then translates each geographic area (e.g., parcel, TAZ, or SPZ) of the input plan into one of the model’s common language of Place Types and Building Types. Place Types represent a full range of potential development types and patterns, from urban mixed-use centers, to employment and industrial areas, to standard suburban residential areas that can be seen across the SCAG region. Each Place Type is composed of a mix of different building types and represents a unique set of assumptions that facilitate scenario modeling and testing at a variety of scales. This allows SCAG to integrate local plans together into a common regional fabric of land use and transportation plan and to perform consistent analysis on individual plans or combinations thereof.
Scenario Painting and Editing
SPM’s web-based scenario painter, that includes a suite of selection and viewing tools, allows the user to edit or build upon a translated plan or scenario, or create new scenarios from scratch by applying Place Types to the landscape (see Figure below). In addition to various spatial data layers available via SPM’s graphical user interface, ranging from parcel level land use, to statewide resource areas and farmland, the web- based scenario painter can also display regularly updated data available on the web today (e.g., Google Maps, Open Street Map). SPM builds a scenario by adding the “change” or “increment” that you’ve painted on top of a base condition. The combination of the two produces what is known as the “End state” which represents what will be on the ground in the future.

Scenario Analysis

SPM analysis modules produce a wide range of inter-related metrics that allow for robust and meaningful comparisons of alternative land use and transportation scenarios. Once changes are made to the base canvas via painting or translation of existing plan, scenario core processes combine the changes or growth input with the existing conditions to create future scenarios and estimate developable land and demographic characteristics.
These scenarios then run through the model engines briefly described below to measure their performance for mobility, air quality, public health, fiscal impacts, resource consumptions, and others.

Land Consumption Engine
Land Consumption engine calculates greenfield land consumed to accommodate new growth for future scenarios. Greenfield is identified based on the assessment of the base year or existing condition. Total land consumed in the existing greenfield is then estimated by applying per unit or per employee assumptions, accounting for housing type as well as employment sector.

Fiscal Impact Engine
Fiscal Impact Engine estimates the impacts of varying forms of development on local expenditures. The current engine limits its focus to the impacts associated with new residential growth, accounting for the capital costs of new and upgraded local infrastructure, and operations and maintenance (O&M) costs to serve new and upgraded infrastructures. Cost factors vary by Land Development Category (LDC), development condition (refill or greenfield), and housing type (single family detached large lot, single family detached small lot, single family attached or multifamily).

Building Energy Engine
Building Energy Engine calculates residential and commercial building energy use, and their related costs and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, for both new and existing buildings. Within the engine, energy use is determined by three types of variables: building characteristics, climate zone, and efficiency factors. Building characteristics and climate zone determine what baseline per-residential unit or per-commercial square foot factors are used to calculate energy use. Reductions are then applied to the resulting baseline estimates to reflect the implementation of building efficiency and conservation policies into the future.

Water Engine
Water Engine calculates indoor and outdoor residential and commercial water use, and their related costs and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, for both new and existing buildings. Indoor and outdoor water use is first calculated according to baseline rates, determined by building or employment characteristics and climate zone, and then adjusted to account for the application of efficiency and conservation policies into the future.

Transportation Engine
SPM incorporates a comprehensive “sketch” travel model that produces vehicle miles traveled (VMT), mode choice, and congestion estimates for land use and transportation scenarios, as well as transportation-related costs, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and pollutant emissions. Transportation analysis capabilities within SPM are currently based on the Mixed-Use Development (MXD) trip generation model that estimates the likely degree to which a development area’s traffic generation will be reduced due to trip internalization, external walking, or transit trips. The MXD method uses land use and demographic information as well as outputs from regional transportation model to calculate trip reductions, resulting from the specific combination of factors known to be most influential in trip generation.

Public Health Engine
Public health engine measures the impact of land use patterns and urban form on physical activity-related weight and disease incidences, and respiratory impacts, as well as their related costs. Respiratory health analysis is based on overall VMT from SCAG’s regional transportation model and associated criteria air pollutant emissions from EMFAC. Health incidence and valuation assumptions for select air pollutants (PM2.5, Sox, VOC and NOx) are then applied to estimate pollution-related health incidences and costs.
Physical-activity related health incidences are calculated from California Public Health Assessment Model (C-PHAM) that uses a behavioral and exposure-based pathway approach that links the built environment with health outcomes. C-PHAM provided health outcomes include the Body Mass Index (BMI), the likelihood of being obese or having high blood pressure/heart disease/type 2 diabetes by age group.

Land Conservation Engine
SPM incorporates the Nature Conservancy’s land conservation engine that measures the impacts of change upon a detailed depiction of existing conditions on the four major themes: carbon, water, agriculture, and habitat. The terrestrial carbon storage model analyzes the impact of land use changes on carbon storage associated with natural vegetation in the landscape as well as with soil organic carbon. The water theme measures the impacts of changes to natural lands or land cover on watershed, the ground recharge potential of converted lands, water resource priority areas, and agricultural land with associated water demand. The terrestrial habitat model measures the capacity of the landscape to facilitate or inhibit species movement and the suitability of land use in an area to support terrestrial vertebrates. The agricultural model estimates the impact of land conversion on agricultural production and capacity.
These helpful links are designed to provide additional information related to land use and transportation scenario planning tools and strategies.
For additional information about the SPM, contact:
SCAG SPM team: spm@scag.ca.gov

SPM provides a powerful and dynamic scenario creation, modeling, and data organization framework designed to facilitate more informed and collaborative planning by providing a comprehensive view of potential futures. Its suite of tools and analytic engines enable the creation and organization of local and regional data, plans and policies, facilitate scenario creation and editing, and estimate a wide range of potential benefits resulting from alternative transportation and land use strategies.
These helpful links are designed to provide additional information related to land use and transportation scenario planning tools and strategies.
For additional information about the SPM, contact:
SCAG SPM team: spm@scag.ca.gov