Research Highlights
Key Enhancements to the WFRC/MAG Four-Step Travel Demand Model
Reid Ewing
Shima Hamidi
Conventional four-step travel demand modeling is overdue for a major update. The latest NITC report from the University of Utah offers planners better predictive accuracy through an improved model, allowing for much greater sensitivity to new variables that affect travel behavior. Specifically, it accounts for varying rates of vehicle ownership, intrazonal travel, and multimodal mode choices.
Used by nearly all metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs), state departments of transportation...
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Understanding the Accessibility, Economic and Social Equity Impacts of Urban Greenway Infrastructure
Jenny Liu
“City Greenways” is a concept proposed as a part of Portland’s 2035 Comprehensive Plan, which calls for a citywide network of park-like pedestrian and bicycle friendly streets crisscrossing the city at roughly three-mile intervals. This research establishes several approaches to measure the transportation network impact of the “City Greenways” and relate bicycle network measures to economic and social equity outcomes.
Expanding upon existing literature, we derived three sets of bicycle ac...
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