Varying influences of the built environment on household travel in 15 diverse regions of the United States

Author:

Ewing Reid1,Tian Guang1,Goates JP1,Zhang Ming2,Greenwald Michael J3,Joyce Alex4,Kircher John1,Greene William5

Affiliation:

1. University of Utah, USA

2. University of Texas at Austin, USA

3. Oregon Health Authority, USA

4. Fregonese Associates Inc., USA

5. New York University, USA

Abstract

This study pools household travel and built environment data from 15 diverse US regions to produce travel models with more external validity than any to date. It uses a large number of consistently defined built environmental variables to predict five household travel outcomes – car trips, walk trips, bike trips, transit trips and vehicle miles travelled (VMT). It employs multilevel modelling to account for the dependence of households in the same region on shared regional characteristics and estimates ‘hurdle’ models to account for the excess number of zero values in the distributions of dependent variables such as household transit trips. It tests built environment variables for three different buffer widths around household locations to see which scale best explains travel behaviour. The resulting models are appropriate for post-processing outputs of conventional travel demand models, and for sketch planning applications in traffic impact analysis, climate action planning and health impact assessment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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