Heterogeneity in the Relationship Between Bicycling and the Built Environment
Bicycling is an environmentally friendly, healthy, and affordable mode of transportation that is viable for short distance trips. Urban planners, public health advocates, and others are therefore looking for strategies to promote more bicycling, including improvements to the built environment that make bicycling more attractive. This study presents an analysis of how key built environment characteristics relate to bicycling frequency based on a large sample from the 2012 California Household Travel Survey and detailed built environment data. The built environment characteristics the authors explore include residential and intersection density at anchor locations (home, work, school), green space, job access, land use mix, and bicycle infrastructure availability. Analyses are conducted separately for three distinct demographic groups: school-age children, employed adults, and adults who are not employed. The key conclusion from this work is that the relationship between bicycling and some built environment characteristics varies between types of people – most dramatically between adults and children. To develop targeted policies with scarce resources, local policymakers need specific guidance as to which investments and policy changes will be most effective for creating “bikeable” neighborhoods. This work indicates that the answer depends – at least in part – on who these bikeable neighborhoods are meant to serve.
- Record URL:
- Record URL:
-
Supplemental Notes:
- This document was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Transportation, University Transportation Centers Program. Cover title: Heterogeneity in the Relationship Between Biking and the Built Environment.
-
Corporate Authors:
Arizona State University, Tempe
School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment
Tempe, AZ United States 85287-5306Center for Teaching Old Models New Tricks (TOMNET)
Arizona State University
Tempe, AZ United States 85287Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology
University Transportation Centers Program
Department of Transportation
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Authors:
- Salon, Deborah
-
0000-0002-2240-8408
- Conway, Matthew W
-
0000-0002-1210-2982
- Wang, Kailai
-
0000-0002-5597-6823
- Roth, Nathaniel
-
0000-0001-7929-2242
- Publication Date: 2019-1
Language
- English
Media Info
- Media Type: Digital/other
- Features: Figures; References; Tables;
- Pagination: 30p
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Bicycle facilities; Bicycling; Built environment; Demographics
- Identifier Terms: California Household Travel Survey
- Geographic Terms: California
- Subject Areas: Pedestrians and Bicyclists; Planning and Forecasting;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01852765
- Record Type: Publication
- Contract Numbers: 69A3551747116
- Files: UTC, NTL, TRIS, ATRI, USDOT
- Created Date: Jul 25 2022 11:50AM