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Article title
Job/Housing Imbalance and Commuting Time in the Atlanta Metropolitan Area: Exploration of Causes of Longer Commuting Time
Author
Sultana, S.
Journal title
URBAN GEOGRAPHY
Bibliographic details 2002, VOL 23; PART 8, pages 728-749
 
 
Urban geography. [0272-3638 ] Silver Spring, Md. : V.H. Winston & Sons, c1980-
Call#: HT101 .U683


A multi-scale analysis of urban form and commuting change in a small metropolitan area (1990-2000)

Journal The Annals of Regional Science

Issue Volume 41, Number 2 / June, 2007

Mark W. Horner

Abstract Issues of growth, especially the spatial nature of recent urban development and its implications for travel patterns, have received a great deal of attention. In particular, questions persist as to how the spatial distribution of workers and jobs influences commute patterns. This paper investigates changes in commuting and land use patterns using measures of jobs-housing balance, commuting efficiency and other statistics. A smaller urban area is chosen for study (Tallahassee, FL, USA)and data on its workers, jobs, and commute patterns are obtained from the Census Transportation Planning Package for 1990 and 2000. The key research questions investigated probe whether there were substantial changes in urban form and commuting over the period. A two-tiered approach is taken where change is explored at the regional and local scales using GIS, optimization procedures, and inferential statistical techniques. The results reveal the extent of the spatial changes in the study area between 1990 and 2000. Major findings included stability in urban structure over the time period, as well as a persistent strong relationship between land use and commute patterns. These results are discussed in light of their implications for other cities and for future work.

tagged city_planning urban_planning transportation land_use congestion commuting by jn ...on 15-OCT-07
Small, Kenneth A. . Road work : a new highway pricing and investment policy / Kenneth A. Small, Clifford Winston, Carol A. Evans. [0815794703 (alk. paper) : ] Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution, c1989.
Call#: Lippincott Library HE355 .S49 1989


tagged city_planning congestion land_use transportation transportation_policy urban_planning by jn ...on 11-OCT-07
Title: Testing the conventional wisdom about land use and traffic congestion: The more we sprawl, the less we move?
Source: Urban Studies [0042-0980] Sarzynski yr:2006 vol:43 iss:3 pg:601

Abstract
The paper explores relationships between seven dimensions of land use in 1990 and subsequent levels of three traffic congestion outcomes in 2000 for a sample of 50 large US urban areas. Multiple regression models are developed to address several methodological concerns, including reverse causation and time-lags. Controlling for prior levels of congestion and changes in an urban area's transport network and relevant demographics, it is found that: density/continuity is positively related to subsequent roadway ADT/lane and delay per capita; housing centrality is positively related to subsequent delay per capita; and housing-job proximity is inversely related to subsequent commute time. Only the last result corresponds to the conventional wisdom that more compact metropolitan land use patterns reduce traffic congestion. These results prove two points: that the choice of congestion measure may substantively affect the results; and that multivariate statistical analyses are necessary to control for potentially confounding influences, such as population growth and investment in the transport network.
 
tagged congestion land_use sprawl transportation by jn ...on 08-OCT-07