Abstract

Among the studies on the land use – travel relationship, few investigated it regarding weekend travel and destination choice. This study accordingly evaluates how the land use - destination choice relationship differs between weekdays and weekends using two multinomial logistic regression models in which the destination is classified into three types: microzone inside, microzone outside - macrozone inside, and macrozone outside. Major findings are that the choice of automobile alternatives for travel and their ownership are associated with the choice of the microzone inside while employment and income contribute to external trips. Among land use variables, nighttime population density turns out to be the only land use variable that consistently increases internal trips in all cases, regardless of the zone size and weekday - weekend difference, whereas daytime population density does not become significant in any case. Also, land use entropy and street connectivity are found to discourage a trip that moves from the microzone to the macrozone and transit system variables to facilitate a trip that goes beyond the microzone. Particularly, between two types of transit system variables, the choice of the microzone is likely to be associated with low bus stop density on weekdays and low metro station density on weekends.

Highlights

  • Transportation researchers have been investigating the relationship between land use and travel behaviour for well over half a century [e.g. 1, 2] through which they reached an agreement on the overall significance of the relationship [3]

  • A second, more critical issue is related to travel behaviour: most previous studies were concerned with weekday travel [8,9,10,11], so in terms of external validity, the general significance of the land use – travel relationship can be concluded only on weekday travel, that is, little is known about weekend travel

  • Instead of the typical binary grouping of the intraand inter-zonal trips, studies [e.g. 33] are recommended to further categorize trip destinations and they would identify a spatial range at which a particular variable would affect the destination choice

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Summary

Introduction

Transportation researchers have been investigating the relationship between land use and travel behaviour for well over half a century [e.g. 1, 2] through which they reached an agreement on the overall significance of the relationship [3]. A second, more critical issue is related to travel behaviour: most previous studies were concerned with weekday travel [8,9,10,11], so in terms of external validity, the general significance of the land use – travel relationship can be concluded only on weekday travel, that is, little is known about weekend travel. (The inflexibility of weekday travel causes it to face somewhat inevitable congestion, in particular time periods and places.) According to such a flexibility, land use variables are expected to affect weekend travel in different magnitudes. It is because in relation to the temporal and spatial

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