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Title: The Impact of Residential Location Decisions on Miles Traveled, Trip Frequency, and Automobile Ownership for Households in the Portland Metropolitan Region
Accession Number: 01520113
Record Type: Component
Availability: Transportation Research Board Business Office 500 Fifth Street, NW Abstract: Understanding residential location decisions and their interconnected relationship with travel behavior provides valuable insight to policymakers planning for a more accessible and efficient transportation-land use connection. Decisions regarding neighborhood type, building structure, and housing tenure uniquely contribute to the complexity of residential location. This study examined these residential location decisions and their association with the travel outcomes of miles traveled, person trips, and vehicle ownership for households in the Portland metropolitan region. A two-step methodology utilizing a factor and cluster analysis was employed to introduce a neighborhood typology, constructed of policy sensitive attributes and with commonly available archived data to enable replication in other settings. A set of linear regression models estimated miles traveled by mode, while additional negative binomial models estimated person trips by automobile, bike, and walk as well as household automobile ownership. These travel outcomes were compared across households segmented by lifecycle stage and in regard to light rail access. Results from this research revealed that households located in more urban neighborhoods exhibited lower vehicle miles traveled (VMT), conducted more non-motorized trips, and owned fewer automobiles. Moreover, households residing in multifamily structures tended to own fewer automobiles and walk greater distances with a greater frequency than those residing in single-family units; whereas, households who rented their housing units owned fewer automobiles and drove less often with lower VMT. Less instinctive findings suggested residing near a city center rail station actually increased person miles traveled by bike.
Supplemental Notes: This paper was sponsored by TRB committee ADD30 Transportation and Land Development.
Alternate title: Impact of Residential Location Decisions on Miles Traveled, Trip Frequency, and Automobile Ownership for Households in Portland Metropolitan Region, Oregon
Monograph Title: Monograph Accession #: 01503729
Report/Paper Numbers: 14-5027
Language: English
Corporate Authors: Transportation Research Board 500 Fifth Street, NW Authors: Gehrke, Steven RCurrans, Kristina MClifton, Kelly JPagination: 19p
Publication Date: 2014
Conference:
Transportation Research Board 93rd Annual Meeting
Location:
Washington DC Media Type: Digital/other
Features: Figures; Maps; References; Tables
TRT Terms: Geographic Terms: Subject Areas: Highways; Planning and Forecasting; I72: Traffic and Transport Planning
Source Data: Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2014 Paper #14-5027
Files: TRIS, TRB, ATRI
Created Date: Jan 27 2014 3:46PM
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