Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply
Potential influences on explaining walking distance from home to access public transport are investigated, including trip and demographic characteristics and public transport supply. In Sydney, Australia, people walk farther to the train than to the bus, the distributions of walking distances are di...
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University of Minnesota
2013-08-01
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doaj-cce18db953b84503b2dcca6c4873697b2021-08-31T04:38:34ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492013-08-016210.5198/jtlu.v6i2.308134Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supplyRhonda Daniels0Corinne Mulley1ITLS, University of SydneyITLS, University of SydneyPotential influences on explaining walking distance from home to access public transport are investigated, including trip and demographic characteristics and public transport supply. In Sydney, Australia, people walk farther to the train than to the bus, the distributions of walking distances are different for each mode, and the trip and demographic characteristics of train and bus users are different. Given the decision to walk to public transport, demographic characteristics such as age, gender, income, and labor force status and trip characteristics such as trip purpose, time of day and week, fare and ticket type, and trip duration are not significant in explaining walking distance to each mode of public transport. The mode of the public transport trip is the most important determinant of walking distance, reflecting the different supply and spacing of each mode. For instance, there are many more bus stops than train stations. The differences between train and bus users suggest that accessibility initiatives for public transport might not be the same for each mode.https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/308Accessibilityaccess to public transportland use |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rhonda Daniels Corinne Mulley |
spellingShingle |
Rhonda Daniels Corinne Mulley Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply Journal of Transport and Land Use Accessibility access to public transport land use |
author_facet |
Rhonda Daniels Corinne Mulley |
author_sort |
Rhonda Daniels |
title |
Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply |
title_short |
Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply |
title_full |
Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply |
title_fullStr |
Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply |
title_full_unstemmed |
Explaining walking distance to public transport: The dominance of public transport supply |
title_sort |
explaining walking distance to public transport: the dominance of public transport supply |
publisher |
University of Minnesota |
series |
Journal of Transport and Land Use |
issn |
1938-7849 |
publishDate |
2013-08-01 |
description |
Potential influences on explaining walking distance from home to access public transport are investigated, including trip and demographic characteristics and public transport supply. In Sydney, Australia, people walk farther to the train than to the bus, the distributions of walking distances are different for each mode, and the trip and demographic characteristics of train and bus users are different. Given the decision to walk to public transport, demographic characteristics such as age, gender, income, and labor force status and trip characteristics such as trip purpose, time of day and week, fare and ticket type, and trip duration are not significant in explaining walking distance to each mode of public transport. The mode of the public transport trip is the most important determinant of walking distance, reflecting the different supply and spacing of each mode. For instance, there are many more bus stops than train stations. The differences between train and bus users suggest that accessibility initiatives for public transport might not be the same for each mode. |
topic |
Accessibility access to public transport land use |
url |
https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/308 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT rhondadaniels explainingwalkingdistancetopublictransportthedominanceofpublictransportsupply AT corinnemulley explainingwalkingdistancetopublictransportthedominanceofpublictransportsupply |
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1721184462096564224 |