Analysis of work trip timing and mode choice in the Greater Toronto Area

Author:

Day Nicholas123,Habib Khandker Nurul123,Miller Eric J.123

Affiliation:

1. IBI Group, 77 Franklin Street, 7th Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA.

2. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, School of Mining and Petroleum Engineering (SMPE), 3-004 Markin/CNRL Natural Resource Engineering Facility, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2W2, Canada.

3. Department of Civil Engineering, Cities Centre, University of Toronto, 35 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 1A4, Canada.

Abstract

This paper focuses on examining and analyzing observed trends in work trip making in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). Commuter trip timing and mode choice behaviour are investigated to explain the main reasons behind peak spreading observed in cordon count data from 1975 through 2004 and to better understand the relationship between modal and temporal decisions. From analysis it becomes clear that significant differences exist in the trip timing trends of individuals choosing different modes. Multinomial logit mode choice models are developed for separate occupation groups, revealing significant differences in the mode choice preferences between occupation groups. Such differences are related to the differences in occupation-specific factors, including labour rates, work hour rules, free parking availability, and the spatial distribution of work locations. Overall, the investigations of this paper indicate that a joint analysis and modelling of trip timing and mode choice has considerable merit in travel demand models.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

General Environmental Science,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference9 articles.

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4. Synthesis of first practices and operational research approaches in activity-based travel demand modeling

5. Miller, E.J. 2007. A travel demand modelling system for the Greater Toronto Area, Version 3.0: Volume II GTAMODEL Version 3.0 model system documentation. Joint Program in Transportation, University of Toronto, ON, Canada.

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