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Title: ENHANCING TRANSIT'S COMPETITIVENESS: A SURVEY METHODOLOGY
Accession Number: 00771136
Record Type: Component
Record URL: Availability: Transportation Research Board Business Office 500 Fifth Street, NW Find a library where document is available Abstract: Attracting customers to the bus and subway is an often-discussed goal for transit agencies. Current research methodologies such as travel demand, stated preference, and discrete choice models and opinion research are sometimes poorly suited to determining which types of service improvements, facility designs, or fare policy initiatives will be most effective in attracting potential customers. Drawing on elements of established methods, an approach is developed for use by New York City Transit focusing on travelers' actual experience of the subway, bus, automobile, taxi, and car service and their reasons for mode choice. Survey questions were developed from focus group findings that New Yorkers actively choose between competing modes on the basis of six major factors, from how long the trip will take to availability of parking. Travelers choose the mode that presents the least difficulty for a particular type of trip. Survey results show that the areas of subway service improvement with the greatest potential ridership payoff are reducing how long it takes to make a trip, increasing the availability or ease of use of transit, and making traveling on the subway a more comfortable and relaxing experience. Two external factors--parking availability and taxi fares--are also found to significantly affect subway ridership.
Supplemental Notes: This paper appears in Transportation Research Record No. 1669, Public Transit Planning, Management and Performance, and Marketing and Fare Policy.
Language: English
Corporate Authors: Transportation Research Board 500 Fifth Street, NW Authors: SCHALLER, BPagination: p. 143-149
Publication Date: 1999
Serial: ISBN: 030907066X
Features: References
(10)
; Tables
(4)
TRT Terms: Identifier Terms: Uncontrolled Terms: Subject Areas: Highways; Public Transportation; Society
Files: TRIS, TRB, ATRI
Created Date: Oct 11 1999 12:00AM
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