policy brief

What Can Be Done to Speed Up Building Approval for Multifamily Housing in Transit-Accessible Locations?

Abstract

California’s legislature has attempted to address the state’s housing affordability crisis in recent years by adopting numerous laws encouraging new development in transit-accessible and/or jobs-rich areas, but the evidence concerning the impacts of these laws on housing development remains largely anecdotal. In particular, policymakers lack adequate information concerning: (1) the types of neighborhoods where developers are more likely to build; and (2) the causes of delays in approvals for proposed projects in jobs-rich and transit-accessible areas. In new research, scholars from UC Irvine and UC Berkeley address this problem by drawing on a unique project-level dataset, the Comprehensive Assessment of Land Use Entitlements (CALES), to analyze development projects including five or more residential units that were approved for development from 2014 through 2017 in six cities: Inglewood, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Pasadena, Redondo Beach, and Santa Monica.

Suggested Citation
Douglas Houston, Eric Biber, Giulia Gualco-Nelson, Jae Hong Kim, Moira O'Neill, Narae Lee and Nicholas Marantz (2022) What Can Be Done to Speed Up Building Approval for Multifamily Housing in Transit-Accessible Locations?. Policy Brief. UC ITS. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7922/g2tq5zvp.

research report

Understanding household preferences for alternative-fuel vehicle technologies

Publication Date

June 1, 2011

Abstract

This report explores consumer preferences among four different alternative-fuel vehicles (AFVs): hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicles, hydrogen fuel cell (HFC) vehicles, and electric vehicles (EVs). Although researchers have been interested in understanding consumer preferences for AFVs for more than three decades, it is important to update our estimates of the trade-offs people are willing to make between cost, environmental performance, vehicle range, and refueling convenience. A nationwide, Internet-based survey assessed consumer preferences for AFVs. In general, gasoline-fueled vehicles are still preferred over AFVs, however there is a strong interest in AFVs. No AFV type is overwhelmingly preferred, although HEVs seem to have an edge. Trade-offs are assessed; to leave a personâ??s utility unchanged, a $1,000 increase in AFV cost needs to be compensated by: 1) a $300 savings in driving cost over 12,000 miles; 2) a 17.5 mile increase in vehicle range; or 3) a 7.8-minute decrease in total refueling time.

Suggested Citation
Hilary Nixon and Jean-Daniel Saphores (2011) Understanding household preferences for alternative-fuel vehicle technologies, p. 130p.

research report

Section-Related Measures of Traffic System Performance: Prototype Field Implementation

Abstract

In this project (MOU 336),an initial phase of a field implementation was accomplished of the results of a previous research project (MOU 224),in which a vehicle reidentification algorithm based on loop signature analysis was developed using freeway traffic data.This algorithm was extended to non-freeway cases, initially using a section of 2-lane major arterial in cooperation with the City of Irvine,California.The technique was enhanced to address problems such as “irregularities ” in vehicle signatures associated with trucks,tail-gating vehicles and erroneous counting of vehicles,with the objective of obtaining 100% correct counts at each station.The enhanced algorithm was also applied to a major specially instrumented signalized intersection in Irvine,California to demonstrate acquisition of data for real-time congestion monitoring,incident detection and level of service measurement.The initial application was for through vehicles on one approach.In order to achieve more reliable vehicle reidentification results,additional routines for vehicle movement filtering at the downstream station were applied.Reidentification results based on an initial dataset showed an encouraging matching result of 84.07%overall,for individual vehicles.Speed estimation from a single loop signature was one of the applications investigated in detail. For several study sites,the vehicle reidentification matching rates,using speed estimated from a single loop,were only slightly lower than for double loops.In another detailed application (using freeway data collected in previous PATH project MOU 224),vehicle classification using a Backpropagation Neural Network showed an 80 %classification rate overall for all vehicle types.Heuristic approaches to vehicle classification also demonstrated good results.

Suggested Citation
Stephen G. Ritchie, Carlos Sun, Seri Oh and Cheol Oh (2001) Section-Related Measures of Traffic System Performance: Prototype Field Implementation. Final Report UCB-ITS-PRR-2001-32. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0f89s74m.

research report

Analysis of Activity-Travel Patterns and Tour Formation of Transit Users

Abstract

This study analyzed the complex travel behavior of transit users by expanding conventional trip-based approaches by considering full activity-travel tours and patterns as basic units of analysis. A tour was defined as a sequence of trips that begins and ends at home and a pattern was defined as an entire day’s sequence of activities and associated travel. We considered basic descriptive analyses to first analyze work tours—the tours that contain at least one work activity—of transit commuters and then used Structural Equation Modeling to identify the factors that determine the work tour choices. Latent Class Analysis (LCA) was then used to describe the pattern behaviors of all transit users. The results obtained using the 2017 National Household Travel Survey dataset suggested that 80 percent of work tours consisted of seven dominant tours and that work tour choice was influenced by a set of socio-demographics, built environment, and activity-travel characteristics. The LCA model suggested that transit users can be divided into five distinct classes, namely regular 9-to-5 commuters, after-work stop commuters, multimodal multiple trip makers, morning non-work travelers, and recurrent transit users, where each class had a representative activity-travel pattern. The results can help transit agencies to identify transit user groups with particular activity patterns and to consider market strategies to address user travel needs and to improve the quality of services provided.

Suggested Citation
Michael G McNally and Rezwana Rafiq (2021) Analysis of Activity-Travel Patterns and Tour Formation of Transit Users. Final Report PSR-19-33. ITS-Irvine. Available at: https://www.metrans.org/assets/research/psr-19-33_to-033_mcnally_finalreport.pdf (Accessed: October 11, 2023).

published journal article

Safety of High-Occupancy vehicle lanes without physical separation

Journal of Transportation Engineering

Publication Date

November 1, 1989

Author(s)

Thomas Golob, Will Recker, Douglas W. Levine
Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob, Wilfred W. Recker and Douglas W. Levine (1989) “Safety of High-Occupancy vehicle lanes without physical separation”, Journal of Transportation Engineering, 115(6), pp. 591–607. Available at: 10.1061/(asce)0733-947x(1989)115:6(591).

published journal article

Does ridesourcing respond to unplanned rail disruptions? A natural experiment analysis of mobility resilience and disparity

Cities

Publication Date

September 1, 2023

Author(s)

Elisa Borowski, Jason Soria, Joseph Schofer, Amanda Stathopoulos

Abstract

Urban rail transit networks provide critical access to opportunities and livelihood in many urban systems. Ensuring that these services are resilient (that is, exhibiting efficient responses to and recovery from disruptions) is a key economic and social priority. Increasingly, the ability of urban rail systems to cope with disruptions is a function of a complex patchwork of mobility options, wherein alternative modes can complement and fill occurring service gaps. This study analyzes the role of ridesourcing in providing adaptive mobility capacity that could be leveraged to fill no-notice gaps in rail transit services, addressing the question of distributional impacts of resilience. Using a natural experiment, we systematically identify 28 major transit disruptions over the period of one year in Chicago and match them, both temporally and spatially, with ridesourcing trip data. Using multilevel mixed modeling, we quantify variation in the adaptive use of on-demand mobility across the racially and economically diverse city of Chicago. Our findings show that the gap-filling potential of adaptive ridesourcing during rail transit disruptions is significantly influenced by the station-, community-, and district-level factors. Specifically, greater shifts to ridesourcing occur during weekdays, nonholidays, and more severe disruptions, in community areas that have higher percentages of white residents and transit commuters, and in the more affluent North district of the city. These findings suggest that while ridesourcing appears to provide adaptive capacity during rail disruptions, its benefits do not appear to be equitable for lower-income communities of color that already experience limited mobility options. Research implications for mobility operator collaborations to support mobility as a service are discussed. This study builds a more comprehensive understanding of transit service resilience, variation in vulnerability, and the complementarity of ridesourcing to existing transport networks during disruptions.

Suggested Citation
Elisa Borowski, Jason Soria, Joseph Schofer and Amanda Stathopoulos (2023) “Does ridesourcing respond to unplanned rail disruptions? A natural experiment analysis of mobility resilience and disparity”, Cities, 140, p. 104439. Available at: 10.1016/j.cities.2023.104439.

published journal article

Public accountability and performance of two border water utilities

Water policy : official journal of the World Water Council

Publication Date

November 1, 2009
Suggested Citation
Ismael Aguilar-Benitez and Jean-Daniel Saphores (2009) “Public accountability and performance of two border water utilities”, Water policy : official journal of the World Water Council, 12(2), pp. 203–219. Available at: 10.2166/wp.2009.032.

published journal article

An Agent-based Cooperative Lane-Changing System with Payments

Procedia Computer Science

Abstract

Traffic advisories to travelers are based upon traffic state information at the link level. However, with the advances in automotive technology, sensing equipment, and the Internet of Things (IoT), we can leverage more granular information. Research shows that faster and more accurate travel paths can be obtained by using lane data rather than link data. For vehicles to be able to change lanes to improve their travel times, operationally, they would need to enter into Peer-to-Peer negotiations with surrounding vehicles, where they can trade their position in time and space in exchange for monetary benefits. Our work is an exploration of this idea. We propose an agent-based optimization framework for this system, which minimizes both travel time and the “envy” induced among drivers when they are assigned paths that are inferior to their peers. Numerical results from running our optimization on an illustrative off-ramp network show that the proposed model converges to both envy-free and system optimum traffic states, even at a net zero budget, meaning this system can be used by transportation agencies without exacting tolls or giving subsidies.

Suggested Citation
Riju Lavanya, Daisk Nam and R. Jayakrishnan (2024) “An Agent-based Cooperative Lane-Changing System with Payments”, Procedia Computer Science, 238, pp. 785–790. Available at: 10.1016/j.procs.2024.06.092.

published journal article

Airport congestion when carriers have market power

American Economic Review

Publication Date

November 1, 2002

Author(s)

Abstract

This paper analyzes airport congestion when carriers are nonatomistic, showing how the results of the road-pricing literature are modified when the economic agents causing congestion have market power. The analysis shows that when an airport is dominated by a monopolist, congestion is fully internalized, yielding no role for congestion pricing under monopoly conditions. Under a Cournot oligopoly, however, carriers are shown to internalize only the congestion they impose on themselves. A toll that captures the uninternalized portion of congestion may then improve the allocation of traffic. The analysis is supported by some rudimentary empirical evidence.

Suggested Citation
Jan K Brueckner (2002) “Airport congestion when carriers have market power”, American Economic Review, 92(5), pp. 1357–1375. Available at: 10.1257/000282802762024548.

published journal article

Improved path flow estimator for Origin–Destination trip tables

Transportation Research Record

Publication Date

January 1, 2005

Author(s)

Piya Chootinan, Anthony Chen, Will Recker
Suggested Citation
Piya Chootinan, Anthony Chen and Will Recker (2005) “Improved path flow estimator for Origin–Destination trip tables”, Transportation Research Record, 1923(1), pp. 9–17. Available at: 10.1177/0361198105192300102.