Bus Transit Operational Efficiency Resulting from Passenger Boardings at Park-and-Ride Facilities
Document Type
Report
Publication Date
2016
Subject Area
economics - capital costs, economics - operating costs, economics - value of time, mode - bus, mode - park and ride, place - north america, place - urban, ridership - commuting, ridership - growth
Keywords
Public transportation, bus public transit, park-and-ride, multimodal facilities, geographic information systems
Abstract
In order to save time and money by not driving to an ultimate destination, some urban commuters drive themselves a few miles to specially designated parking lots built for transit customers and located where trains or buses stop. The focus of this paper is the effect Park-and-Ride (P&R) lots have on the efficiency of bus transit as measured in five bus transit systems in the western U.S. This study describes a series of probes with models and data to find objective P&R influence measures that, when combined with other readily-available data, permit a quantitative assessment of the significance of P&R on transit efficiency. The authors developed and describe techniques that examine P&R as an influence on transit boardings at bus stops and on bus boardings along an entire route. The regression results reported are based on the two in-depth case studies for which sufficient data were obtained to examine (using econometric techniques) the effects of park-and-ride availability on bus transit productivity. Both Ordinary Least Square (OLS) regression and Poisson regression are employed. The results from the case studies suggest that availability of parking near bus stops is a stronger influence on transit ridership than residential housing near bus stops. Results also suggest that expanding parking facilities near suburban park-and-ride lots increases the productivity of bus operations as measured by ridership per service hour. The authors also illustrate that reasonable daily parking charges (compared to the cost of driving to much more expensive parking downtown) would provide sufficient capital to build and operate new P&R capacity without subsidy from other revenue sources.
Rights
Permission to publish the abstract has been given by Mineta Transportation Institute, copyright remains with them.
Recommended Citation
Niles, J.S., & Pogodzinski, J.M. (2016). Bus Transit Operational Efficiency Resulting from Passenger Boardings at Park-and-Ride Facilities. Mineta Transportation Institute, Report WP 12-60, 99pp.