Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas

Accessibility impacts mode choice and the degree of its impact varies between geographic regions and income groups. This paper presents an introductory analysis of this relationship for low and higher-income groups across 11 Canadian metropolitan areas. In all regions, low-income groups exhibit high...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Boer Cui, Ahmed El-Geneidy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Findings Press 2019-02-01
Series:Findings
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.32866/7400
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850103924624719872
author Boer Cui
Ahmed El-Geneidy
author_facet Boer Cui
Ahmed El-Geneidy
author_sort Boer Cui
collection DOAJ
description Accessibility impacts mode choice and the degree of its impact varies between geographic regions and income groups. This paper presents an introductory analysis of this relationship for low and higher-income groups across 11 Canadian metropolitan areas. In all regions, low-income groups exhibit higher public transport use at the same level of accessibility. Additional differences exist between income groups in different regions when considering the change in mode share with varying accessibility. This study, while demonstrating the link between public transport mode share and accessibility, also begets further research to explain the differences in this relationship between groups in different regions.
format Article
id doaj-art-d7e797dc7cbc4070ac1e118d6d2d855e
institution DOAJ
issn 2652-8800
language English
publishDate 2019-02-01
publisher Findings Press
record_format Article
series Findings
spelling doaj-art-d7e797dc7cbc4070ac1e118d6d2d855e2025-08-20T02:39:26ZengFindings PressFindings2652-88002019-02-0110.32866/7400Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan AreasBoer CuiAhmed El-GeneidyAccessibility impacts mode choice and the degree of its impact varies between geographic regions and income groups. This paper presents an introductory analysis of this relationship for low and higher-income groups across 11 Canadian metropolitan areas. In all regions, low-income groups exhibit higher public transport use at the same level of accessibility. Additional differences exist between income groups in different regions when considering the change in mode share with varying accessibility. This study, while demonstrating the link between public transport mode share and accessibility, also begets further research to explain the differences in this relationship between groups in different regions.https://doi.org/10.32866/7400
spellingShingle Boer Cui
Ahmed El-Geneidy
Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas
Findings
title Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas
title_full Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas
title_fullStr Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas
title_full_unstemmed Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas
title_short Accessibility, Equity, and Mode Share: A Comparative Analysis Across 11 Canadian Metropolitan Areas
title_sort accessibility equity and mode share a comparative analysis across 11 canadian metropolitan areas
url https://doi.org/10.32866/7400
work_keys_str_mv AT boercui accessibilityequityandmodeshareacomparativeanalysisacross11canadianmetropolitanareas
AT ahmedelgeneidy accessibilityequityandmodeshareacomparativeanalysisacross11canadianmetropolitanareas