754 research outputs found
Unveiling E-bike potential for commuting trips from GPS traces
Common goals of sustainable mobility approaches are to reduce the need for travel, to facilitate modal shifts, to decrease trip distances and to improve energy efficiency in the transportation systems. Among these issues, modal shift plays an important role for the adoption of vehicles with fewer or zero emissions. Nowadays, the electric bike (e-bike) is becoming a valid alternative to cars in urban areas. However, to promote modal shift, a better understanding of the mobility behaviour of e-bike users is required. In this paper, we investigate the mobility habits of e-bikers using GPS data collected in Belgium from 2014 to 2015. By analysing more than 10,000 trips, we provide insights about e-bike trip features such as: distance, duration and speed. In addition, we offer a deep look into which routes are preferred by bike owners in terms of their physical characteristics and how weather influences e-bike usage. Results show that trips with higher travel distances are performed during working days and are correlated with higher average speeds. Usage patterns extracted from our data set also indicate that e-bikes are preferred for commuting (home-work) and business (work related) trips rather than for recreational trips
The White Bicycle: Performance, Installation Art, and Activism in Ghost Bike Memorials
In this project I examine the performative nature of the ghost bike memorial. Ghost bikes, flat-white painted immobile bicycles created by cycling communities and loved ones of victims, are installed roadside to mark the locations of cycling related deaths. Using critical performance ethnography and critical-cultural analysis as methods, I analyze how the ghost bike performs as an artifact of mourning and inspires co-incident performances of grief, activism, and community building and maintenance. As a memorial object used worldwide to represent cycling culture, the ghost bike acts as a social network link that connects a multitude of diverse cycling communities. I present five case studies of ghost bikes in New York City, Durham, North Carolina, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, and Lafayette, Louisiana in order to dissect what the polysemic ghost bike communicates to public audiences. My analysis led to the discovery that ghost bikes are not only used as memorials. They also perform as metonyms for the absent, ruined bodies of cyclists; as markers of racial identity for victims; and as tools to reframe the narratives told about cycling-related deaths. I describe how the differing interpretations of the memorial are adapted to create and alter performances of identity, and I argue for the potential for these performances to influence perceptions about cycling safety, cycling-based legislation, and road infrastructure
Boosting the eco-friendly sharing economy: The effect of gasoline prices on bikeshare ridership in three U.S. metropolises
Transportation has become the largest CO2 emitter in the United States in recent years with low gasoline prices standing out from many contributors. As demand side changes are called for reducing car use, the fast-growing sharing economy shows great potential to shift travel demand away from single-occupancy vehicles. Although previous inter-disciplinary research on shared mobility has explored its multitudes of benefits, it is yet to be investigated how the uptake of this eco-friendly sharing scheme is affected by gasoline prices. In this study, we examine the impact of gasoline prices on the use of bikeshare programs in three U.S. metropolises: New York City, Boston, and Chicago. Using bikeshare trip data, we estimate the impact of citywide gasoline prices on both bikeshare trip duration and trip frequency in a generalized linear regression setting. The results suggest that gasoline prices significantly affect bikeshare trip frequency and duration, with a noticeable surge in short trips. Doubling gasoline prices could help save an average of 1933 gallons of gasoline per day in the three cities, approximately 0.04% of the U.S. daily per capita gasoline consumption. Our findings indicate that fuel pricing could be an effective policy tool to support technology driven eco-friendly sharing mobility and boost sustainable transportation
Contributions to the 10th International Cycling Safety Conference 2022 (ICSC2022)
This publication contains all contributions (extended abstracts) to the 10th International Cycling Safety Conference, which was held in Dresden, Germany, Nov. 08-10, 2022
An End-to-End Solution for Enabling Urban Cyclability: The Bike2Work Experience
Mobility plays a fundamental role in modern cities. How citizens experience
the city, access its core services, and participate in city life, strongly
depends on its mobility organization and efficiency. The challenges that
municipalities face are very ambitious: on the one hand, administrators must
guarantee their citizens the right to mobility and to easily access local
services; on the other hand, they need to minimize the economic, social, and
environmental costs of the mobility system. Municipalities are increasingly
facing problems of traffic congestion, road safety, energy dependency and air
pollution, and therefore encouraging a shift towards sustainable mobility
habits based on active mobility is of central importance. Active modes, such as
cycling, should be particularly encouraged, especially for local recurrent
journeys (i.e., home-to-school, home-to-work). In this context, addressing and
mitigating commuter-generated traffic requires engaging public and private
stakeholders through innovative and collaborative approaches that focus not
only on supply (e.g., roads and vehicles) but also on transportation demand
management. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end solution for enabling urban
cyclability. It supports the companies' Mobility Managers (MMs) acting on the
promotion of active mobility for home-to-work commuting, helps the city
administrators to understand the needed urban planning interventions, and
motivates the citizens to sustainable mobility. To evaluate the effectiveness
of the proposed solution we developed two analyses: the first to accurately
analyze the user experience and any behaviour change related to the BIKE2WORK
initiative, and the second to demonstrate how exploiting the collected data we
can inform and possible guide the involved municipality (i.e., Ferrara, a city
in Northern Italy) in improving the urban cyclability.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Cycling Through the Pandemic : Tactical Urbanism and the Implementation of Pop-Up Bike Lanes in the Time of COVID-19
Provides an international overview on how tactical urbanism was implemented to give more space to cycling
Demonstrates the conceptual framework surrounding tactical urbanism and how it plays out theoretically
Proposes new methodological insights to understand the effects of tactical urbanism intervention
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IMPROVING YOUNG DRIVER PERCEPTIONS OF VULNERABLE ROAD USERS THROUGH A PERSUASIVE INTERVENTION
Vulnerable road users (VRUs), including bicyclists, pedestrians, and road users of other modalities, are at a higher risk of collision with young drivers when a complex traffic situation presents itself. Past research has established the importance of young drivers’ perceptions about VRUs that would encourage safe behavior. This research designed and evaluated a novel persuasive intervention that can help improve the perceptions of young drivers while they interact with VRUs. The study identified young drivers’ perceptions towards VRUs who have been licensed in the past 12 to 18 months through structured interviews. Based on these findings, an interactive intervention was designed and evaluated that persuades young drivers to improve their interactions with VRUs. The results showed an improvement in self-reported violations among groups who received the intervention or the control. Additionally, participants who received a citation showed lower violations and lapses in the intervention and control groups compared to those who did not receive any treatment. The outcome of this research is a methodology that can help design future interventions for improving young driving behavior by understanding their perceptions, and continuously assess their performance during the intervention period
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