Measuring the Performance of Transit Relative to Livability
Author(s) -
Marc Schlossberg,
Cody Meyer,
Jennifer Dill,
Liang Ma
Publication year - 2013
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.15760/trec.135
Subject(s) - transit (satellite) , transport engineering , destinations , service (business) , work (physics) , level of service , transit system , public transport , rail transit , computer science , business , geography , engineering , marketing , mechanical engineering , tourism , archaeology
This project sought to understand the relationship between urban form, transit service characteristics, and ridership measured at the stop level. Most previous work in this area has looked at these issues separately, by either linking system performance (e.g. on-time performance, cost, etc.) to ridership or exploring the connection between urban form (e.g. density) and transit use. This project synthesized these disparate approaches. While transit service characteristics (e.g. frequency, travel time, etc.) are important to help individuals reach their desired destinations, most transit users are pedestrians at the beginning and end of any transit trip. Therefore, focusing on the walkable zone around each transit stop was also important.
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