Influence of Socio-Demography and Operating Streetscape on Last-Mile Mode Choice

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Date

2016

Subject Area

mode - rail, mode - bus, mode - bike, mode - pedestrian, place - asia, planning - surveys, planning - service improvement, infrastructure - interchange/transfer, land use - planning, land use - impacts, ridership - mode choice

Keywords

travel distance, streetscape, last-mile mode choice, socio-demography, connectivity

Abstract

This study investigated how personal and operational factors (travel distance and streetscape) influence traveler mode choice decisions for the last-mile home-bound trip stage from rail transit stations. Personal factors include the socio-demography of travelers, and attributes of the streetscape include the built environment (degree of areal development), prevalence of cycling, availability of short-range transport modes, and walking/cycling infrastructure. Interviewers randomly intercepted pedestrians to administer a mode choice survey at five rail transit station exits and engaged all available cyclists at bicycle parking areas in the vicinity of stations in Singapore. A multimodal logit regression model revealed a significant relationship between the last-mile home-bound trip maker’s mode choice with factors of age, gender, travel distance between transit station and destination, number of cyclists along adjacent links surrounding transit stations, number of feeder bus services to destination, availability of private vehicle, and household income. The calibrated model was applied to compute the probability of walking, cycling, and taking a feeder bus for the last-mile home-bound trip maker from a transit station. This study provides useful information for improving the efficiency and connectivity of first/last-mile mobility in a multimodal transport network.

Rights

Permission to publish the abstract has been given by the Journal of Public Transportation, copyright remains with them.

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