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If You Zone It, Who Will Come, and How Will They Travel? The Effects of Relaxed Zoning Regulations on Travel Behavior.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
If You Zone It, Who Will Come, and How Will They Travel? The Effects of Relaxed Zoning Regulations on Travel Behavior./
作者:
Conway, Matthew Wigginton.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2021,
面頁冊數:
181 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-11, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International82-11A.
標題:
Urban planning. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28492750
ISBN:
9798738620362
If You Zone It, Who Will Come, and How Will They Travel? The Effects of Relaxed Zoning Regulations on Travel Behavior.
Conway, Matthew Wigginton.
If You Zone It, Who Will Come, and How Will They Travel? The Effects of Relaxed Zoning Regulations on Travel Behavior.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2021 - 181 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-11, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Arizona State University, 2021.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Urban areas across the Unites States are facing a housing affordability crisis. One approach some cities and states have taken is to reduce or eliminate single-family zoning. Single-family zoning prevents the construction of more-affordable apartments in vast swaths of the American urban landscape. This policy shift has already occurred in Minneapolis, Sacramento, and Oregon, and is under discussion in California, Massachusetts, and North Carolina, among others.Independent of any effects on housing affordability, changes to land use will have effects on transport. I evaluate these effects using a microsimulation framework. In order for land use policies to have an effect on transport, they need to first have an effect on land use, so I first build an economic model to simulate where development will occur given a loosening of single-family zoning. Transport outcomes will vary depending on which households live in which parts of the region, so I use an equilibrium sorting model to forecast how residents will re-sort across the region in response to the land use changes induced by new land-use policies. This model also jointly forecasts how many vehicles each household will choose to own. Finally, I apply an activity-based travel demand microsimulation model to forecast the changes in transport associated with the forecast changes from the previous models.I find that while there is opportunity for economically-feasible redevelopment of single-family homes into multifamily structures, the amount of redevelopment that will occur varies greatly depending on the exact expectations of developers about future market conditions. Redevelopment is focused in higher-income neighborhoods.The transport effects of the redevelopment are minimal. Average car ownership across the region does not change hardly at all, although residents of new housing units do have somewhat lower car ownership. Vehicles kilometers traveled, mode choice, and congestion change very little as well. This does not mean that upzoning does not affect transport in general, but that more nuanced proposals may be necessary to promote desirable transport outcomes. Alternatively, the results suggest that upzoning will not worsen transport outcomes, promising for those who support upzoning on affordability grounds.
ISBN: 9798738620362Subjects--Topical Terms:
2122922
Urban planning.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Land use transport interaction
If You Zone It, Who Will Come, and How Will They Travel? The Effects of Relaxed Zoning Regulations on Travel Behavior.
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Urban areas across the Unites States are facing a housing affordability crisis. One approach some cities and states have taken is to reduce or eliminate single-family zoning. Single-family zoning prevents the construction of more-affordable apartments in vast swaths of the American urban landscape. This policy shift has already occurred in Minneapolis, Sacramento, and Oregon, and is under discussion in California, Massachusetts, and North Carolina, among others.Independent of any effects on housing affordability, changes to land use will have effects on transport. I evaluate these effects using a microsimulation framework. In order for land use policies to have an effect on transport, they need to first have an effect on land use, so I first build an economic model to simulate where development will occur given a loosening of single-family zoning. Transport outcomes will vary depending on which households live in which parts of the region, so I use an equilibrium sorting model to forecast how residents will re-sort across the region in response to the land use changes induced by new land-use policies. This model also jointly forecasts how many vehicles each household will choose to own. Finally, I apply an activity-based travel demand microsimulation model to forecast the changes in transport associated with the forecast changes from the previous models.I find that while there is opportunity for economically-feasible redevelopment of single-family homes into multifamily structures, the amount of redevelopment that will occur varies greatly depending on the exact expectations of developers about future market conditions. Redevelopment is focused in higher-income neighborhoods.The transport effects of the redevelopment are minimal. Average car ownership across the region does not change hardly at all, although residents of new housing units do have somewhat lower car ownership. Vehicles kilometers traveled, mode choice, and congestion change very little as well. This does not mean that upzoning does not affect transport in general, but that more nuanced proposals may be necessary to promote desirable transport outcomes. Alternatively, the results suggest that upzoning will not worsen transport outcomes, promising for those who support upzoning on affordability grounds.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28492750
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