research report

Infill Dynamics in Rail Transit Corridors: Challenges and Prospects for Integrating Transportation and Land Use Planning

Abstract

Although local and regional planning entities have attempted to direct growth into transit corridors to achieve the sustainability goals of California Senate Bill 375 (SB 375), little is known about the complexity of near-transit infill dynamics. This project aims to enhance the authors understanding of the relationship between transit investment and urban land use change through a systematic investigation of parcel-level land use in Southern California with a focus on the first phase of the Gold Line, opened in 2003. The authors multinomial logistic regression results indicate that vacant parcels within the vicinity of new transit stations are more likely to be developed not only for residential but also for other urban purposes, than those with limited transit accessibility. Although relatively small in terms of magnitude, the presence of long-term (or indirect) effects is also detected, suggesting that continuing investment in a transit system can benefit both new and existing station areas by promoting the utility of the overall public transit service. Transit stations with low ridership, however, tend to generate smaller land use impacts, indicating the importance of the vitality of transit service. Transit investment’s impacts on industrial site reuse also appears to be less evident, while transit investment seems to function as a facilitator of the site redevelopment for multi-family housing and urban open space.

Suggested Citation
Jae Hong Kim, Doug Houston, Jaewoo Cho, WAN-TZU LO, XIAOXIA SHI, ANDREA HOFF, NICHOLAS BRANIC and HUY C. LY (2016) Infill Dynamics in Rail Transit Corridors: Challenges and Prospects for Integrating Transportation and Land Use Planning. Final Report CA16-2641, UCTC-FR-2016-06. ITS-Irvine. Available at: https://dot.ca.gov/-/media/dot-media/programs/research-innovation-system-information/documents/f0016803-ca16-2641-finalreport.pdf.

conference paper

‪Dynamic Pricing for High Occupancy Toll Lanes along a Freeway Corridor based on Bathtub Model‬

100th Transportation Research Board (TRB) Annual Meeting

Publication Date

January 1, 2021
Suggested Citation
Irene Martinez and Wenlong Jin (2021) “‪Dynamic Pricing for High Occupancy Toll Lanes along a Freeway Corridor based on Bathtub Model‬”. 100th Transportation Research Board (TRB) Annual Meeting. Available at: https://scholar.google.it/citations?view_op=view_citation&hl=en&user=iyvllDAAAAAJ&sortby=pubdate&citation_for_view=iyvllDAAAAAJ:8k81kl-MbHgC (Accessed: October 16, 2023).

conference paper

Receding horizon trajectory optimization for simultaneous signal landscape mapping and receiver localization

26th international technical meeting of the satellite division of the institute of navigation, ION GNSS 2013

Publication Date

January 1, 2013

Author(s)

Zaher Kassas, J.A. Bhatti, T.E. Humphreys
Suggested Citation
Z.M. Kassas, J.A. Bhatti and T.E. Humphreys (2013) “Receding horizon trajectory optimization for simultaneous signal landscape mapping and receiver localization”, in 26th international technical meeting of the satellite division of the institute of navigation, ION GNSS 2013, pp. 1962–1969.

working paper

Statistical Analysis of Transit Performance

Publication Date

December 1, 1977

Author(s)

Charles Lave, Randall J., Jr. Pozdena

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-77-10

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

The literature of transit research contains few studies which have examined the effects of environmental and operational factors on the performance of public transit. The existence and strength of these effects, however, are often the basis for argument against quantitative evaluation of performance. Environmental conditions such as the location and character of the population being served, the geographic nature of the transit service area, prevailing wage rates in an area, and operational characteristics such as organizational structure, vehicle age, and vehicle passenger capacities certainly affect quantitative performance indicators and their interpretation. At the same time, little effort has been made toward applying evaluative techniques proven in other fields to the evaluation of transit performance. Procedures do exist–in agriculture, for example–for the aggregation of operational statistics into single indices of technical efficiency. Extensive collection of operating and financial data from 47 public transit operators in California for UMTA Research and Training Grant CA-11-0014, “Development of Performance Indicators For Transit,” facilitated initial analysis efforts in each of these areas.1 Data was obtained primarily from public documents, with missing, and additional data elements supplied by representatives of each transit property. Even with the high commitment of time and resources made by this project to assembling and verifying this data, its reliability and uniformity were found to be inadequate for statistical analysis. The following two sections describe the application of the collected operating and financial data to two multivariate statistical techniques. The first technique, production function analysis, examines the use of a unified efficiency measure on public transit. The second technique, multiple regression analysis, investigates the effects of particular operational characteristics on indicators of transit performance.

Suggested Citation
Charles A. Lave and Randall J., Jr. Pozdena (1977) Statistical Analysis of Transit Performance. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-77-10. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1n68b9sf.

conference paper

Model-based design of time-triggered real-time embedded systems for industrial automation

2015 IEEE 20th conference on emerging technologies & factory automation (ETFA)

Publication Date

September 1, 2015

Author(s)

Jiang Wan, Arquimedes Canedo, Mohammad Al Faruque
Suggested Citation
Jiang Wan, Arquimedes Canedo and Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque (2015) “Model-based design of time-triggered real-time embedded systems for industrial automation”, in 2015 IEEE 20th conference on emerging technologies & factory automation (ETFA). IEEE. Available at: 10.1109/etfa.2015.7301522.

working paper

The Dynamics of Household Travel Time Expenditures and Car Ownership Decisions

Publication Date

May 1, 1989

Associated Project

Author(s)

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-89-11, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-89-3

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

The objective of this research is to establish causality in the interrelationships among household travel time expenditures by mode and car ownership, conditional upon exogenous changes in factors such as income, the numbers of household workers and drivers, and stage in the family life cycle. Panel data with extended travel diary periods (of, say, a week’s duration) provide a unique opportunity to understand how households balance their levels of time expenditures and car ownership, and how they adjust these levels in response to exogenous changes. Such an opportunity is provided by the Dutch National Mobility Panel (1984-1988), and in the Netherlands an appropriate breakdown of travel modes is: car (driver and passenger), public transport (including bus, tram, subway, and train), and nonmotorized modes (including bicycle and walking).

Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob (1989) The Dynamics of Household Travel Time Expenditures and Car Ownership Decisions. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-89-11, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-89-3. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3sp6h6cm.

MS Thesis

The interjurisdictional coordination of Katella Avenue traffic signals

Suggested Citation
Barbara Neenan (1991) The interjurisdictional coordination of Katella Avenue traffic signals. MS Thesis. UC Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991031562489704701.

conference paper

SMORE: Similarity-Based Hyperdimensional Domain Adaptation for Multi-Sensor Time Series Classification

Proceedings of the 61st ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference

Publication Date

June 23, 2024
Suggested Citation
Junyao Wang and Mohammad Al Faruque (2024) “SMORE: Similarity-Based Hyperdimensional Domain Adaptation for Multi-Sensor Time Series Classification”, in Proceedings of the 61st ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference. DAC '24: 61st ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference, San Francisco CA USA: ACM, pp. 1–6. Available at: 10.1145/3649329.3658477.

published journal article

Report of the fourth international workshop on design automation for cyber-physical systems (DACPS) 2019

IEEE Design & Test

Publication Date

December 1, 2019

Author(s)

Mohammad Al Faruque, Chung-Wei Lin
Suggested Citation
Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque and Chung-Wei Lin (2019) “Report of the fourth international workshop on design automation for cyber-physical systems (DACPS) 2019”, IEEE Design & Test, 36(6), pp. 84–85. Available at: 10.1109/mdat.2019.2934361.

published journal article

TRICEPS-CARTESIUS: Advanced transportation management system test bed for evaluation of interjurisdictional traffic management strategies

Transportation Research Record

Abstract

The initial testing and evaluation of one of the key components of the Testbed Real-Time Integrated Control and Evaluation Prototype System (TRICEPS) are described. TRICEPS is a software platform that facilitates the implementation and evaluation of a wide range of algorithms for traffic control and advanced transportation management systems. TRICEPS supports research activities by providing consistent interfaces for transportation management modules to both simulated and real-world environments. One of the key components of the TRICEPS platform is a distributed architecture for real-time decision support to transportation management center operators that provides a set of core transportation management applications for multijurisdictional traffic control and incident management on freeway and arterial networks. The architecture hosts algorithms for the estimation of current traffic conditions, the analysis of incident characteristics, and the formulation of multiple-decision-maker traffic control plans using advanced methodologies for cooperation and conflict resolution. Although the process of evaluation of such methodologies using the TRICEPS platform is aimed at demonstrating the effectiveness of the cooperative approach, it also provides a demonstration of platform functionality for range of related applications.

Suggested Citation
Filippo Logi, Craig R. Rindt, Michael G. McNally and Stephen G. Ritchie (2001) “TRICEPS-CARTESIUS: Advanced transportation management system test bed for evaluation of interjurisdictional traffic management strategies”, Transportation Research Record, 1748(1), pp. 125–131. Available at: 10.3141/1748-16.