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Journal ArticleDOI

A micro-analysis of land use and travel in five neighborhoods in the San Francisco Bay Area

TLDR
In this article, the effects of land use and attitudinal characteristics on travel behavior for five diverse San Francisco Bay Area neighborhoods were examined, and the finding that attitudes are more strongly associated with travel than are land use characteristics suggests that land use policies promoting higher densities and mixtures may not alter travel demand materially unless residents' attitudes are also changed.
Abstract
This study examined the effects of land use and attitudinal characteristics on travel behavior for five diverse San Francisco Bay Area neighborhoods. First, socio-economic and neighborhood characteristics were regressed against number and proportion of trips by various modes. The best models for each measure of travel behavior confirmed that neighborhood characteristics add significant explanatory power when socio-economic differences are controlled for. Specifically, measures of residential density, public transit accessibility, mixed land use, and the presence of sidewalks are significantly associated with trip generation by mode and modal split. Second, 39 attitude statements relating to urban life were factor analyzed into eight factors: pro-environment, pro-transit, suburbanite, automotive mobility, time pressure, urban villager, TCM, and workaholic. Scores on these factors were introduced into the six best models discussed above. The relative contributions of the socio-economic, neighborhood, and attitudinal blocks of variables were assessed. While each block of variables offers some significant explanatory power to the models, the attitudinal variables explained the highest proportion of the variation in the data. The finding that attitudes are more strongly associated with travel than are land use characteristics suggests that land use policies promoting higher densities and mixtures may not alter travel demand materially unless residents' attitudes are also changed.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Travel and the Built Environment

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of the built environment-travel literature existing at the end of 2009 is conducted in order to draw generalizable conclusions for practice, and finds that vehicle miles traveled is most strongly related to measures of accessibility to destinations and secondarily to street network design variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Travel demand and the 3ds: density, diversity, and design

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined how the built environment affects trip rates and mode choice of residents in the San Francisco Bay Area using 1990 travel diary data and land-use records obtained from the U.S. census, regional inventories, and field surveys.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental correlates of walking and cycling: Findings from the transportation, urban design, and planning literatures

TL;DR: In this article, neighborhood environment characteristics proposed to be relevant to walking/cycling for transport are defined, including population density, connectivity, and land use mix, with evidence suggesting that residents from communities with higher density, greater connectivity and more land-use mix report higher rates of walking and cycling for utilitarian purposes than low-density, poorly connected, and single land use neighborhoods.
Journal ArticleDOI

How the built environment affects physical activity: views from urban planning

TL;DR: To provide more conclusive evidence, the available evidence lends itself to the argument that a combination of urban design, land use patterns, and transportation systems that promotes walking and bicycling will help create active, healthier, and more livable communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Travel and the built environment: a synthesis

TL;DR: Elasticities of travel demand with respect to density, diversity, design, and regional accessibility are derived from selected studies and may be useful in travel forecasting and sketch planning and have already been incorporated into one sketch planning tool, the Environmental Protection Agency’s Smart Growth Index model.
References
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Journal Article

Impacts of Mixed Use and Density on Utilization of Three Modes of Travel: Single-Occupant Vehicle, Transit, and Walking

TL;DR: In this paper, an empirical analysis to test the impacts of land-use mix, population density, and employment density on the use of the single-occupant vehicle (SOV), transit, and walking for both work trips and shopping trips is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gasoline Consumption and Cities: A Comparison of U.S. Cities with a Global Survey

TL;DR: This paper found that gasoline consumption per capita in ten large United States cities varies by up to 40 percent, primarily due to land use and transportation planning factors, rather than price or income variations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The commuting paradox: evidence from the top twenty

TL;DR: A comparison of auto commuting trip durations from the 1985 American Housing Survey to data from the 1980 census for the twenty largest metropolitan areas suggests that during the study period average trip times either fell by a statistically significant amount or remained the same as mentioned in this paper.
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