Improving Travel Projections for Public Transportation
Author(s):
D.G. Perkinson, B. Keitgen
Publication Date:
August 1995
Abstract:
Public transportation use saves energy and reduces emissions by taking people out of single passenger automobiles and putting them into high occupancy, energy efficient transit vehicles. Furthermore, public transit ridership and vehicular trip estimates are the base information required for estimating energy consumption and air pollution. Trip generation models as developed and used within Texas predict the number of trips expected to occur in a typical 24-hour day. The need to estimate peak-period trips has generated innovative techniques for estimating peak-period travel from the 24-hour trip tables. Improved methods of estimating the number of trips that will be generated during the peak period will potentially improve the estimation of ridership on public transportation, as well as related energy and emission forecasts. This project produced a trip generation model for predicting peak-period trips based on the travel surveys conducted in Texas during 1991 and 1991 for Amarillo, Beaumont-Port Arthur, Brownsville, San Antonio, Sherman-Denison, and Tyler.
Report Number:
SWUTC/95/721935-1
Electronic Link(s):
Document/Product
https://swutc.tamu.edu/publications/technicalreports/721935-1.pdf
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