Transit score: Screening model for evaluating community suitability for transit investments
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2008
Abstract
The transit score is a measure that can inform the selection of appropriate transit investments for a given community. The model estimates a measure of the potential for success of various transit investmentsthe transit score-as a function of the densities of population, employment, and carless households. A version of this methodology was developed in 1989 by the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission (DVRPC), the metropolitan planning organization for the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Camden-Trenton, New Jersey, region. The method was adapted and expanded by the New Jersey Transit Corporation (NJ TRANSIT) in 2000 to evaluate future rail and fixed guideway extensions in its 2020 plan. Several other versions of the transit score methodology are known to exist and have been applied in studies across the United States. In 2005, DVRPC staff, in collaboration with NJ TRANSIT, undertook a project to validate and apply the transit score methodology to areas within the DVRPC region. Three versions of the transit score model were calibrated with linear regression models by using observed transit journey-to-work mode share as a proxy for transit score. Development of the transit score model is documented, revisions and statistical validation are described, and a range of applications of the transit score, both completed and contemplated, are discussed.
Identifier
58449126061 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Transportation Research Record
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.3141/2063-14
ISSN
03611981
First Page
115
Last Page
124
Issue
2063
Recommended Citation
Lutin, Jerome M.; Krykewycz, Gregory R.; Hacker, Joseph F.; and Marchwinski, Thomas W., "Transit score: Screening model for evaluating community suitability for transit investments" (2008). Faculty Publications. 13024.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/13024
