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Will bus travellers walk further for a more frequent service? An international study using a stated preference approach

Network planning of bus services requires addressing the trade-off between frequency and coverage. Traditional network planning has focused on coverage using the rule of thumb that people will walk four hundred meters to access bus based public transport services. More modern approaches have recogni...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Transport policy 2018-10, Vol.69, p.88-97
Main Authors: Mulley, Corinne, Ho, Chinh, Ho, Loan, Hensher, David, Rose, John
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Network planning of bus services requires addressing the trade-off between frequency and coverage. Traditional network planning has focused on coverage using the rule of thumb that people will walk four hundred meters to access bus based public transport services. More modern approaches have recognised that encouraging mode shift means improving quality and thus in the presence of budget constraint, a shift of resources is needed to provide better frequency or smaller headways on core corridors. Using a Stated Choice experiment approach, this paper elicits the trade-off between access distance and headways and how this might vary in a number of cities around the world. The key results confirm travellers in all cities forming part of the sample are willing to walk further for a more frequent service: in Australian capital cities between 226 m and 302 m further for a 10-min reduction in bus headways, while in UK and US this is between 370 m and 475 m further for the same improvement in bus headway. The research provides a consistent valuation for the design attributes of service (such as distance to stop, journey time, headway/frequency and crowding) over eleven cities together with an estimation of the role of socio demographics in tempering how far passengers are likely to walk to access a high frequency corridor and potentially achieve mode shift from the private car. •Paper addresses trade-off between frequency and coverage in network planning.•Stated choice experiment elicits the extent to which passengers will walk further.•Experiment compares Australian, US and UK cities.•Extra distance travellers are willing to walk varies between cities.•Policy implication is context matters in developing high frequency corridors.
ISSN:0967-070X
1879-310X
DOI:10.1016/j.tranpol.2018.06.002