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The ridership performance of the built environment for BRT systems: Evidence from Latin America

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages 172-184

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2018.06.018

Keywords

Built environment; Bus rapid transit (BRT); Demand; Transit-oriented development; Latin America

Funding

  1. Lee Schipper Memorial Scholarship
  2. World Resources Institute WRI
  3. Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
  4. Institute of the Study of the Americas
  5. Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Despite the increasing popularity of BRT worldwide, there is a lack of empirical evidence regarding the built environment characteristics that determine BRT ridership. We examine associations between BRT station level demand and built environment attributes for 120 stations in seven Latin American cities. Using direct ridership models, we study whether underlying built environment factors identified using factor analysis and the package of these factors embodied in station types identified using cluster analysis were associated with higher ridership. Of the nine factors identified, those describing compactness with dominant multifamily residential uses and stations with public and institutional land uses along the corridor were positively associated with ridership, while factors describing single-family residential development away from the CBD were negatively associated with ridership. Thirteen station types were identified, of which six were associated with BRT ridership. Relevant station types for ridership included those with a high mixture of land uses, the presence of institutional uses and public facilities, major transfer nodes in peripheral areas, and stations with a strong pedestrian environment. Taken together, our findings suggest that the mix and dominance of various land uses around the stop, the location of BRT stations relative to the CBD, the developable land around the station, and the integration of the station to the urban fabric are important characteristics that determine BRT ridership. These insights will help substantiate the case for prioritizing-built environment changes as a means to build more prosperous and sustainable mass transit systems.

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