Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity

Pedestrian travel data are critical for measuring and analyzing sustainable transportation systems. However, traditional household travel surveys and analysis methods often ignore secondary modes, such as walking from a street parking space to a store entrance or walking from a bus stop to home. New...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robert James Schneider
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota 2013-11-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Land Use
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/311
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spelling doaj-0e6f2f3c3c5f44a894a03a4345d9400a2021-08-31T04:38:33ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492013-11-016310.5198/jtlu.v6i3.311145Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activityRobert James Schneider0University of California, BerkeleyPedestrian travel data are critical for measuring and analyzing sustainable transportation systems. However, traditional household travel surveys and analysis methods often ignore secondary modes, such as walking from a street parking space to a store entrance or walking from a bus stop to home. New data collection and analysis techniques are needed, especially in areas where walking is common. This paper describes an intercept survey methodology used to measure retail pharmacy customer travel to, from, and within 20 shopping districts in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of the 1003 respondents, 959 (96 percent) reported all modes of travel used from leaving home until returning home, including secondary modes. Walking was the primary travel mode on 21 percent of respondent tours, but an analysis of secondary modes found that 52 percent of tours included some walking. Pedestrian travel was particularly common within shopping districts, accounting for 65 percent of all trips within 804 meters (0.5 miles) of survey stores. Detailed walking path data from the survey showed that respondents in denser, more mixed-use shopping districts tended to walk along the main commercial street as well as other streets connecting to the core shopping area, while respondent pedestrian movements in automobile-oriented shopping districts tended to be contained within specific shopping complexes.https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/311pedestrianwalkingsurveygeographic information systems (GIS)performance measurement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert James Schneider
spellingShingle Robert James Schneider
Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
Journal of Transport and Land Use
pedestrian
walking
survey
geographic information systems (GIS)
performance measurement
author_facet Robert James Schneider
author_sort Robert James Schneider
title Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
title_short Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
title_full Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
title_fullStr Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
title_full_unstemmed Measuring transportation at a human scale: An intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
title_sort measuring transportation at a human scale: an intercept survey approach to capture pedestrian activity
publisher University of Minnesota
series Journal of Transport and Land Use
issn 1938-7849
publishDate 2013-11-01
description Pedestrian travel data are critical for measuring and analyzing sustainable transportation systems. However, traditional household travel surveys and analysis methods often ignore secondary modes, such as walking from a street parking space to a store entrance or walking from a bus stop to home. New data collection and analysis techniques are needed, especially in areas where walking is common. This paper describes an intercept survey methodology used to measure retail pharmacy customer travel to, from, and within 20 shopping districts in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of the 1003 respondents, 959 (96 percent) reported all modes of travel used from leaving home until returning home, including secondary modes. Walking was the primary travel mode on 21 percent of respondent tours, but an analysis of secondary modes found that 52 percent of tours included some walking. Pedestrian travel was particularly common within shopping districts, accounting for 65 percent of all trips within 804 meters (0.5 miles) of survey stores. Detailed walking path data from the survey showed that respondents in denser, more mixed-use shopping districts tended to walk along the main commercial street as well as other streets connecting to the core shopping area, while respondent pedestrian movements in automobile-oriented shopping districts tended to be contained within specific shopping complexes.
topic pedestrian
walking
survey
geographic information systems (GIS)
performance measurement
url https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/311
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