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Residential location and travel behavior in Hangzhou metropolitan
area
Preliminary results
Professor Petter Næss
Aalborg University and Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research
Research questions of the Hangzhou Metropolitan Area study:
• Which relationships exist between the location of the residence within the urban structure and travel behavior when taking into consideration demographic, socioeconomic as well as attitudinal factors?
• Does the location of the residence within the urban structure influence the range and frequency of activities in which people engage?
• On which rationales do people base their choices of activity locations and travel modes?
• Are the relationships between residential location and travel behavior different among different subgroups of the population?
• Is the effect of a residential situation where the need for everyday transportation is low, offset by a tendency to compensate this by making more frequent and long trips during vacations and weekends?
Macro-level social factors, e.g.:•level of affluence•prevailing values•social classes
Geographical distribution and design of buildings
Mutual location of functions within the building stock
Transport system:•road capacity•public transport service•parking conditions
Transport behavior•amount of transport•modal split
Actors’ resources, needs, wishes
Methods of the Hangzhou metropolitan area study
• Registration of urban structural conditions, including the distances from each respondent’s dwelling to various centers and facilities
• Qualitative interviews of 28 households – Semi-structured, each lasting about an hour and a half – Focus on the interviewees’ activity participation,
location of activities, travel modes and routes
(to be continued on next slide)
Methods of the Hangzhou metropolitan area study (continued)
• Questionnaire survey among inhabitants of 30 selected residential areas (3155 respondents)– Travel distances by different modes during one whole week – Location of any workplace or place of education– Annual driving distance with the household’s car(s)– Changes in the amount of travel among respondents who have
moved during the latest 5 years – Perception of being dependent of car travel in order to reach
daily activities– Frequency of participation in different activities – Holiday trips – Attitudes to transport and environmental issues
(to be continued on next slide)
Methods of the Hangzhou metropolitan area study (continued)
• Detailed travel diary survey Saturday - Tuesday (27 respondents) – Location of the various trip ends – Purpose, length, mode and travel time of each trip – Driving distance of the household’s car(s) (based on
odometer registration) – Changes in activity participation and car ownership
among respondents who have moved during the latest 5 years
– Flights and other trips outside the local region
Interview areas(distance from downtown Hangzhou as the crow flies in parenthesis)
• Xixi Road, Hangda new village (2.5 km)
• Cuiyuan residential area no. 3 (5.0 km)
• Banshan town (11.0 km)
• Zhuangtang town (13.3 km)
• Xiaoshan downtown area (15.2 km)
36
40
1
39
3738
30
3435
31 32
33
27
2829
24 2526
1920
22 23
211516 17 18
111213
14
7
8 910
2 34
65
Legend: Location with 100 or more respondents
Location with 50 – 99 respondents
Location with 10 – 49 respondents
Overall life-forms, lifestyles and rationales influencing activity participation
(number of interviews indicating the rationale in parentheses)
Life-forms and lifestyles:
• Wage-laborer life-form (7)
• Career-oriented life-form (5)
• Life-form of the self-employed (3)
• Upper middle-class, consumerism-oriented lifestyle (3)
• Middle-class, culture-oriented lifestyle (6)
• Money-making lifestyle (3)
Rationales:
• Wish for social contact (17)
• Physical exercise/fitness (6)
• Esthetics (5)
• Caretaking/family obligations (7)
• Distance decay (9)
Rationales for location of activities (number of interviews indicating the rationale in parentheses)
• Choosing the best facilities:– Choosing facilities where the
instrumental purpose of the activities can best be met (25)
– Choosing facilities where social contacts can be maintained (11)
– Choosing facilities matching the interviewees’ cultural, esthetic and symbolic preferences (10)
– Variety-seeking (4)
• Minimizing the friction of distance:– Minimizing the spatial
traveling distance (25)
– Minimizing travel time (3)
– Minimizing the stress or physical efforts of traveling to the destination (7)
– Minimizing economic expenses associated with the trip (not explicitly indicated, but hardly unimportant)
Conditions contributing to:High priority attached to choosing the best facility:• Specialized job skills• Specialized leisure interests and
‘exclusive’ cultural taste • Much time available• High mobility resources• Many facilities available in the
local area of the dwelling, enabling residents to choose
• Short distance from the local facilities to the closest competing concentration of facilities
High priority attached to distance minimizing:• Non-specialized job skills• Non-specialized leisure interests
and ‘non-sophisticated’ cultural taste
• Little time available• Low mobility resources• Few facilities available in the
local area of the dwelling, restricting residents’ possibilities for choice
• Long distance from the local facilities to the closest competing concentration of facilities
Ways of coping with conflicting incentives of rationales for activity location
• A ‘threshold distance’ approach, where all facilities within this threshold are in principle considered as relevant locations. Which of them to choose is then based on a ‘best facility’ rationale
• An algorithm of first trying the closest facility and then moving further on if necessary, e.g. first visiting the closest vegetable market, and then traveling to the second closest if the desired commodities are not available at the first location
• Internet-based survey of facilities (notably shops) in order to avoid unnecessary travel
Rationales for choice among modes of travel (number of interviews indicating the rationale in parentheses)
Concerning the efficiency of the movement:• Time-saving (9)
• Flexibility (6)
• Expansion of the radius of action (1)
• Money-saving (6)
Concerning the process of moving:• Comfort (7)
• Limitation of physical efforts (8)
• Relaxation (3)
• Safety (1)
• Aversion against frustration (3)
• Physical exercise (4)
• Enjoyment of surrounding environment (1)
• Affective dislike or preference for a particular mode (3)
• Habits (2)
• Demonstration of wealth and status (3)
Trip distance is an important intermediate criterion for choice of travel mode
• Walking is typically preferred for the shortest trips
• Bike is typically preferred for other trips within acceptable biking distance
• Motorized modes (car, e-bike, bus, taxi) are typically preferred for trips beyond that distance.
Conditions influencing the emphasis attached to the various rationales for modal choice
• Individual mobility resources: people who do not have any private motor vehicle at their disposal are excluded from choosing these modes
• Physical stamina of the body: People who are physically in good form may have a wide radius of action by bike or by foot, while people with reduced ability for movement by non-motorized modes may depend on motorized conveyance even for very short distances
• Availability of time: A tight schedule may increase the importance of a time-saving rationale
• Trip chaining: The travel mode is usually set by the most distant destination
• Traveling together with family members or friends
• Economic constraints, inducing people to give a high priority to a money-saving rationale
• Cultural predisposition, influencing which types of rationales are considered to be important and legitimate
• Trip purpose, where rationales of comfort and relaxation appear to be more important for trips in connection with entertainment and leisure activities
Influences of rationales for location of activities on the relationship between residential location and the amount of travel
Rationales for activity location Relationship with dist. to downtown
Hangzhou
Relationship with dist. to closest local center
Choosing facilities where the instrumental purpose can best be met
++ -
Choosing facilities where social contacts can be maintained
+ +
Choosing facilities matching cultural, esthetic and symbolic preferences
+ -
Variety-seeking (+) -
Minimizing spatial traveling distance + ++
Minimizing travel time + +
Minimizing stress or physical efforts of traveling to the destination
- +
Minimizing economic expenses (+) ++
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Dist. from the residential area to downtown Copenhagen (km)
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