{"title":"探索建筑环境对共享单车周末出行的影响:广州案例","authors":"Guiyu Chen , Zongcai Wei","doi":"10.1080/15568318.2023.2299018","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Shared mobility has brought many disruptive changes to urban transportation systems all over the world. Shared bikes have proven to be among the most successful and influential travel tools in attempting to alleviate the last-mile problem – the difficulty in getting people from transportation stations to their final destinations. This study aims to investigate the impacts of built environment factors on bike-sharing trips. Although many studies have explored these impacts, most have focused on the impacts of urban function, and have paid insufficient attention to the cycling environment. This study used multi-source data, including street view images (SVIs), points of interest (POIs), digital elevation models (DEMs), and road networks, to fully identify the influences of the built environment from five dimensions. The multiscale geographically weighted regression (MGWR) method was used to investigate the impacts of the urban built environment on bike-sharing usage. The results found that high-density roads, recreational POIs, and residential POIs all had positive impacts on the volume of bike-sharing trips in residential areas on weekends, whereas urban greenness negatively impacts bike-sharing usage in parks, because of strict regulations promulgated by local governments. Moreover, the impacts of high-density street networks and residential communities had strong spatial non-stationarity, while the influences of other built environment factors, including road gradient, eye-level greenness, and urban function mixture, were demonstrated spatial stationarity. These findings can facilitate local governments’ and enterprises’ efforts to improve the cycling environment and ensure the efficient management of shared bikes.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":47824,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Sustainable Transportation","volume":"18 4","pages":"Pages 315-327"},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Exploring the impacts of built environment on bike-sharing trips on weekends: The case of Guangzhou\",\"authors\":\"Guiyu Chen , Zongcai Wei\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/15568318.2023.2299018\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>Shared mobility has brought many disruptive changes to urban transportation systems all over the world. 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The results found that high-density roads, recreational POIs, and residential POIs all had positive impacts on the volume of bike-sharing trips in residential areas on weekends, whereas urban greenness negatively impacts bike-sharing usage in parks, because of strict regulations promulgated by local governments. Moreover, the impacts of high-density street networks and residential communities had strong spatial non-stationarity, while the influences of other built environment factors, including road gradient, eye-level greenness, and urban function mixture, were demonstrated spatial stationarity. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
共享交通给世界各地的城市交通系统带来了许多颠覆性的变化。事实证明,共享单车是最成功、最具影响力的出行工具之一,它试图缓解最后一英里问题--即人们难以从交通站点到达最终目的地的问题。本研究旨在调查建筑环境因素对共享单车出行的影响。尽管许多研究都探讨了这些影响,但大多数研究都侧重于城市功能的影响,对自行车环境的关注不够。本研究使用多源数据,包括街景图像(SVI)、兴趣点(POI)、数字高程模型(DEM)和道路网络,从五个维度全面识别建筑环境的影响。采用多尺度地理加权回归(MGWR)方法研究了城市建筑环境对共享单车使用的影响。结果发现,高密度道路、娱乐性 POI 和居住性 POI 都对住宅区周末的共享单车出行量产生了积极影响,而城市绿化则对公园的共享单车使用量产生了消极影响,因为地方政府颁布了严格的规定。此外,高密度街道网络和住宅小区的影响具有很强的空间非平稳性,而其他建筑环境因素,包括道路坡度、视线绿化和城市功能混合,则表现出空间平稳性。这些发现有助于地方政府和企业改善骑行环境,确保共享单车的有效管理。
Exploring the impacts of built environment on bike-sharing trips on weekends: The case of Guangzhou
Shared mobility has brought many disruptive changes to urban transportation systems all over the world. Shared bikes have proven to be among the most successful and influential travel tools in attempting to alleviate the last-mile problem – the difficulty in getting people from transportation stations to their final destinations. This study aims to investigate the impacts of built environment factors on bike-sharing trips. Although many studies have explored these impacts, most have focused on the impacts of urban function, and have paid insufficient attention to the cycling environment. This study used multi-source data, including street view images (SVIs), points of interest (POIs), digital elevation models (DEMs), and road networks, to fully identify the influences of the built environment from five dimensions. The multiscale geographically weighted regression (MGWR) method was used to investigate the impacts of the urban built environment on bike-sharing usage. The results found that high-density roads, recreational POIs, and residential POIs all had positive impacts on the volume of bike-sharing trips in residential areas on weekends, whereas urban greenness negatively impacts bike-sharing usage in parks, because of strict regulations promulgated by local governments. Moreover, the impacts of high-density street networks and residential communities had strong spatial non-stationarity, while the influences of other built environment factors, including road gradient, eye-level greenness, and urban function mixture, were demonstrated spatial stationarity. These findings can facilitate local governments’ and enterprises’ efforts to improve the cycling environment and ensure the efficient management of shared bikes.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Sustainable Transportation provides a discussion forum for the exchange of new and innovative ideas on sustainable transportation research in the context of environmental, economical, social, and engineering aspects, as well as current and future interactions of transportation systems and other urban subsystems. The scope includes the examination of overall sustainability of any transportation system, including its infrastructure, vehicle, operation, and maintenance; the integration of social science disciplines, engineering, and information technology with transportation; the understanding of the comparative aspects of different transportation systems from a global perspective; qualitative and quantitative transportation studies; and case studies, surveys, and expository papers in an international or local context. Equal emphasis is placed on the problems of sustainable transportation that are associated with passenger and freight transportation modes in both industrialized and non-industrialized areas. All submitted manuscripts are subject to initial evaluation by the Editors and, if found suitable for further consideration, to peer review by independent, anonymous expert reviewers. All peer review is single-blind. Submissions are made online via ScholarOne Manuscripts.