Describing Micro-Mobility First/Last-Mile Routing Behavior in Urban Road Networks through a Novel Modeling Approach

Author:

Tzouras Panagiotis G.1ORCID,Mitropoulos Lambros2ORCID,Koliou Katerina1ORCID,Stavropoulou Eirini1ORCID,Karolemeas Christos3ORCID,Antoniou Eleni1,Karaloulis Antonis3,Mitropoulos Konstantinos2,Vlahogianni Eleni I.4,Kepaptsoglou Konstantinos1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rural Technology and Development, School of Rural, Surveying and Geoinformatics Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, 15780 Athens, Greece

2. LKM Consulting Engineers and Planners, 10682 Athens, Greece

3. MoveNow Technologies P.C., 10677 Athens, Greece

4. Department of Transportation Planning and Technology, School of Civil Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, 15780 Athens, Greece

Abstract

E-scooters aspire to provide flexibility to their users while covering the first/last mile of a multimodal trip. Yet, their dual travel behavior, i.e., utilizing both vehicles’ roadways and pedestrians’ sidewalks, creates new challenges to transport modelers. This study aims to model e-scooter riding behavior in comparison to traditional urban transport modes, namely car and walking. The new modeling approach is based on perceived safety that is influenced by the road environment and affects routing behavior. An ordinal logistic model of perceived safety is applied to classify road links in a 7-point Likert scale. The parametric utility function combines only three basic parameters: time, cost, and perceived safety. First/last mile routing choices are modeled in a test road network developed in Athens, Greece, utilizing the shortest-path algorithm. The proposed modeling approach proved to be useful, as the road environment of an urban area is heterogenous in terms of safety perceptions. Indeed, the model outputs show that the flexibility of e-scooters is limited in practice by their low-perceived safety. To avoid unsafe road environments where motorized traffic dominates, e-scooter riders tend to detour. This decision-making process tool can identify road network discontinuities. Nevertheless, their significance regarding routing behavior should be further discussed.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction

Reference81 articles.

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3. OECD/ITF (2020). Safe Micromobility: Corporate Partnership Board Report, OECD/ITF. Available online: https://www.itf-oecd.org/safe-micromobility.

4. Yanocha, D., and Allan, M. (2019). The Electric Assist: Leveraging E-Bikes and E-Scooters for More Livable Cities, Institute for Transportation & Development Policy.

5. Integrating E-Scooters in Urban Transportation: Problems, Policies, and the Prospect of System Change;Transp. Res. Part D Transp. Environ.,2020

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