Exploring the Spatially Heterogeneous Effects of the Built Environment on Bike-Sharing Usage during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Author:

Yang Hongtai1ORCID,Guo Zishuo1ORCID,Zhai Guocong2ORCID,Yang Linchuan3ORCID,Huo Jinghai1

Affiliation:

1. School of Transportation and Logistics, National Engineering Laboratory of Integrated Transportation Big Data Application Technology, National United Engineering Laboratory of Integrated and Intelligent Transportation, Institute of System Science and Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 611756, China

2. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Old Dominion University (ODU), Norfolk, VA 23529, USA

3. Department of Urban and Rural Planning, School of Architecture, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 611756, China

Abstract

Bike-sharing holds promise for available and healthy mobility services during COVID-19 where bike sharing users can make trips with lower health concerns due to social distancing compared to the restricted transportation modes such as public transit and ridesharing services. Leveraging the trip data of the Divvy bike-sharing system in Chicago, this study exploresspatially heterogeneous effects of built environment on bike-sharing usage under the pandemic. Results show that the average weekly ridership declined by 52.04%. To account for the spatially heterogeneous relationship between the built environment and the ridership, the geographically weighted regression (GWR) model and the semiparametric GWR (S-GWR) model are constructed. We find that the S-GWR model outperforms the GWR and the multiple linear regression models. The results of the S-GWR model indicate that education employment density, distance to subway, COVID-19 cases, and ridership before COVID-19 are global variables. The effects between ridership and the built environment factros (i.e., household density, office employment density, and the ridership) vary across space. The results of this study could provide a useful reference to transportation planners and bike-sharing operators to determine the high bike-sharing demand area under the pandemic,thus adjusting station locations, capacity, and rebalancing schemes accordingly.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Strategy and Management,Computer Science Applications,Mechanical Engineering,Economics and Econometrics,Automotive Engineering

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