Livability, Mobility and Seasonality (Part 2)
The climate and development patterns of rural northern communities make mobility particularly challenging and often cost prohibitive. This project focuses on how weather impacts three aspects of mobility: un-served travel demand, bicycle travel and pedestrian transportation. First, in partnership with the New England Transportation Institute (NETI), using new survey data and existing Center for Rural Studies (CRS) built environment data; team members are measuring and describing the effects of weather on both revealed and un-served travel demand in rural northern communities. Focus groups and surveys are measuring the seasonal variation in bicycle travel demand as well as the associated causes of this variation in order to recommend policies and programs that might promote year-round use. A continuing analysis of pedestrian volume data has already indicated that weather can account for 30% of volume variation.
- Record URL:
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Supplemental Notes:
- http://www.uvm.edu/~transctr/research/trc_reports/UVM-TRC-12-002.pdf
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Completed
- Funding: $156821.00
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Contract Numbers:
DTRT06-G-0018
024811
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Sponsor Organizations:
Research and Innovative Technology Administration
University Transportation Centers Program
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Project Managers:
Troy, Austin
Aultman-Hall, Lisa
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Performing Organizations:
University of Vermont
210 Colchester Avenue
Burlington, VT United States 05405 -
Principal Investigators:
Kolodinsky, Jane
- Start Date: 20100701
- Expected Completion Date: 0
- Actual Completion Date: 20111231
- Source Data: RiP Project 26429
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Bicycle travel; Mobility; Pedestrian traffic; Rural areas; Travel demand
- Subject Areas: Pedestrians and Bicyclists; Planning and Forecasting; Society;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01569170
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: UVM Transportation Center
- Contract Numbers: DTRT06-G-0018, 024811
- Files: UTC, RIP
- Created Date: Jul 2 2015 1:00AM