AASHTO CA15-4-2015 Brief 15 Commuting Flow Patterns.pdf
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1、Brief 15. Commuting Flow Patterns January 2015 Commuting in a merica 2013 The National Report on Commuting Patterns and TrendsAbout the AASHTO Census Transportation Planning Products Program Established by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and the U.S. D
2、epartment of Transportation (U.S. DOT), the AASHTO Census Transportation Planning Products Program (CTPP) compiles census data on demographic characteristics, home and work locations, and journey- to-work travel flows to assist with a variety of state, regional, and local transportation policy and p
3、lanning efforts. CTPP also supports corridor and project studies, environmental analyses, and emergency operations management. In 1990, 2000, and again in 2006, AASHTO partnered with all of the states on pooled-fund projects to sup- port the development of special census products and data tabulation
4、s for transportation. These census transpor- tation data packages have proved invaluable in understanding characteristics about where people live and work, their journey-to-work commuting patterns, and the modes they use for getting to work. In 2012, the CTPP was established as an ongoing technical
5、service program of AASHTO. CTPP provides a number of primary services: Special Data Tabulation from the U.S. Census BureauCTPP oversees the specification, purchase, and delivery of this special tabulation designed by and for transportation planners. Outreach and TrainingThe CTPP team provides traini
6、ng on data and data issues in many formats, from live briefings and presentations to hands-on, full-day courses. The team has also created a number of electronic sources of training, from e-learning to recorded webinars to downloadable presentations. Technical SupportCTPP provides limited direct tec
7、hnical support for solving data issues; the pro- gram also maintains a robust listserv where many issues are discussed, dissected, and resolved by the CTPP community. ResearchCTPP staff and board members routinely generate problem statements to solicit research on data issues; additionally, CTPP has
8、 funded its own research efforts. Total research generated or funded by the current CTPP since 2006 is in excess of $1 million. Staff Penelope Weinberger, CTPP Program Manager Matt Hardy, Program Director, Policy and Planning Jim Tymon, Chief Operating Officer/Director of Policy and Management Proje
9、ct Team Steven E. Polzin, Co-Author, Center for Urban Transportation Research, University of South Florida Alan E. Pisarski, Co-Author, Consultant, Falls Church, Virginia Bruce Spear, Data Expert, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Liang Long, Data Expert, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Nancy McGuckin, Data E
10、xpert, Travel Behavior Analyst Contact Penelope Weinberger, e-mail: pweinbergeraashto.org, phone: 202-624-3556; or CTPPinfoaashto.org 2015 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law. Pub Code: CA15-4 IS
11、BN: 978-1-56051-586-9 2014 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law.Commuting in America 2013: The National Report on Commuting Patterns and Trends Brief 15. Commuting Flow Patterns This brief is the
12、fifteenth in a series describing commuting in America. This body of work, sponsored by American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and carried out in conjunction with a National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) project that provided supporting data, builds
13、 on three prior Commut- ing in America documents that were issued over the past three decades. Unlike the prior reports that were single volumes, this effort consists of a series of briefs, each of which addresses a critical aspect of commuting in America. These briefs, taken together, comprise a co
14、mprehensive summary of American commuting. The briefs are disseminated through the AASHTO website (traveltrends.transportation.org). Accompanying data tables and an Executive Summary complete the body of information known as Commuting in America 2013 (CIA 2013). Brief 15 describes the pattern of com
15、muting travel. Specifically, the home-to-work trip is analyzed to understand the flow of travel that has to be accommodated by transportation infrastructure and services. The discussion covers two distinct elements: first, information about the length of commute trips; and second, information about
16、the spatial orientation of trip flows. Commuting Trip Lengths Assessing patterns of commuting flows at the national level requires the use of broader, more abstract information than can occur at the metropolitan level where more detail is possible. At the national scale, reliance on aggregate units
17、of geography is necessary, which may mask some of the detail needed for local project-level planning but provides an understanding of aggregate needs and trends. The nature of the categorization used to classify urban areas as, for example, cities or suburbs, is often bound by historically-deter- mi
18、ned jurisdictional boundaries that may not always provide a precise understanding of the physical characteristics of the area or commute trip length or orientation. What may be seen very clearly as a suburb in one area may be very unclear to others unfamiliar with the area. The Census Bureaus use of
19、 multiple principal cities, rather than a single central city per metropolitan area, exacerbates the difficulty. Thus, the flow measures presented here are necessarily relatively blunt instruments to characterize what is happening at the broad national or regional scale. A fundamental element of all
20、 flows is simply the typical lengths of work trips. Data are limited in this area, available only intermittently via the National Household Travel Survey (NHTS). Figure 15-1 presents the average trip lengths for more recent periods in which NHTS data are available. By and large, the pattern for work
21、 trips, and for trips of all 2014 by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. All rights reserved. Duplication is a violation of applicable law.4 Commuting in America 2013: The National Report on Commuting Patterns and Trends purposes, has been slowly increasing in len
22、gth over time, with a small dip in 2009, pre- sumed to be attributable to the slow economy, but which is not statistically significant at the 95 percent confidence level. The next NHTS, scheduled for 2015, will help resolve whether this is a pattern change or a cyclical phenomenon. Figure 15-1. Trip
23、 Length T rends for All Modes Source: NHTS Examination of trip lengths by metropolitan area size, shown in Figure 15-2, as ob- served in the 2009 NHTS, shows an almost 30 percent increase in trip lengths as metro size increases. Not surprisingly, non-metro workers are shown to have the longest trip
24、lengths of all. Work-trip lengths have shown only slight variation, with no significant trends, from the 2001 survey. Note that discussions of NHTS work trip length do not include work-at-home trips in the calculation. 8.5 10.7 11.6 12.1 11.8 8.7 9.5 9.2 10 9.7 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 1983 1990 1995 2001
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