TY - JOUR
T1 - Do high income households reduce driving more when living near rail transit?
AU - Boarnet, Marlon G.
AU - Bostic, Raphael W.
AU - Rodnyansky, Seva
AU - Burinskiy, Evgeny
AU - Eisenlohr, Andrew
AU - Jamme, Huê Tâm
AU - Santiago-Bartolomei, Raúl
N1 - Funding Information:
We gratefully acknowledge funding from the METRANS transportation research center for this project (METRANS Project No. 16-07). We are grateful for helpful comments and suggestions from participants at the North American Regional Science Conference 2017 and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning 2017 conference.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/3
Y1 - 2020/3
N2 - Transportation planning today requires an understanding of how income and near-rail residence jointly influence household travel behavior. This article fills a gap in the literature by showing how vehicle miles traveled (VMT) and transit trips taken (TT) vary with income and rail transit access by neighborhood type. Results indicate that, when comparing households with similar incomes and examining how the “near-rail” versus “far from rail” VMT and TT gap varies by income, the cross-sectional reduction in nominal VMT and the increase in TT on a percentage basis is generally larger for higher-income households (>$50,000), and particularly so in neighborhoods dense with both jobs and population. These findings offer support for the notion that near-transit housing targeting higher-income households can have both sustainability and transit use benefits. We note, though, that equity considerations are a strong reason to include low-income housing near rail transit, and argue that policies focusing overly singly on either low-income or high-income housing near rail transit will not be as impactful as a robust focus on mixed-income housing developments in rail transit-oriented developments (TODs).
AB - Transportation planning today requires an understanding of how income and near-rail residence jointly influence household travel behavior. This article fills a gap in the literature by showing how vehicle miles traveled (VMT) and transit trips taken (TT) vary with income and rail transit access by neighborhood type. Results indicate that, when comparing households with similar incomes and examining how the “near-rail” versus “far from rail” VMT and TT gap varies by income, the cross-sectional reduction in nominal VMT and the increase in TT on a percentage basis is generally larger for higher-income households (>$50,000), and particularly so in neighborhoods dense with both jobs and population. These findings offer support for the notion that near-transit housing targeting higher-income households can have both sustainability and transit use benefits. We note, though, that equity considerations are a strong reason to include low-income housing near rail transit, and argue that policies focusing overly singly on either low-income or high-income housing near rail transit will not be as impactful as a robust focus on mixed-income housing developments in rail transit-oriented developments (TODs).
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U2 - 10.1016/j.trd.2020.102244
DO - 10.1016/j.trd.2020.102244
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85080089827
SN - 1361-9209
VL - 80
JO - Transportation Research, Part D: Transport and Environment
JF - Transportation Research, Part D: Transport and Environment
M1 - 102244
ER -