The impact of automated transit, pedestrian, and bicycling facilities on urban travel patterns
Authored by Moira L Zellner, Dean Massey, Yoram Shiftan, Jonathan Levine, Alarcon Maria Arquero de
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1080/03081060.2018.1468968
Sponsors:
US Federal Highway Administration
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
This article reports on an integrated modeling exercise, conducted on
behalf of the US Federal Highway Administration, on the potential for
frequent automated transit shuttles (community transit'), in conjunction
with improvements to the walking and cycling environment, to overcome
the last-mile problem of regional rail transit and thereby divert
travelers away from car use. A set of interlocking investigations was
undertaken, including development of urban visualizations, distribution
of a home-based survey supporting a stated-preference model of mode
choice, development of an agent-based model, and alignment of the
mode-choice and agent-based models. The investigations were designed to
produce best-case estimates of the impact of community transit and
ancillary improvements in reducing car use. The models in combination
suggested significant potential to divert drivers, especially in areas
that were relatively transit-poor to begin with.
Tags
Agent-based model
Integrated modeling
Mode choice
agent-based approach
transportation
Automated transit shuttles
Community transit
Stated preference