Disaggregate Analysis of Relationships Between Commercial Vehicle Parking Citations, Parking Supply, and Parking Demand

作者:Wenneman Adam*; Habib Khandker M Nurul; Roorda Matthew J
来源:Transportation Research Record, 2015, 2478(2478): 28-34.
DOI:10.3141/2478-04

摘要

Over the past several decades, road space and curb space have become increasingly scarce in urban areas. Commercial vehicles are then forced to compete with passenger vehicles for this limited space; this situation leads to an increase in illegal commercial vehicle parking. Increased commercial vehicle parking causes increased congestion, reduced safety for other road users, and an increase in the cost of final goods and services. For appropriate policies to be selected to address this problem, the relationships between illegal commercial vehicle parking and the built environment must be better understood. This research aimed to quantify the relationships of illegal commercial vehicle parking, parking supply, and parking demand through the estimation of a distance-decay-weighted regression model. Data on commercial vehicle parking citations from 2012 for the City of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, are presented. This information was used together with employment data and a parking inventory to estimate the number of tickets issued by address. A distance-decay-weighted method was applied in an attempt to capture the spatial relationships between these variables. Results of this model showed that off-street parking facilities, such as loading bays, surface lots, and parking garages, were related to lower rates of illegal commercial vehicle parking, whereas higher business densities and the restriction of existing on-street parking spaces were related to increased illegal commercial vehicle parking. These results suggest that policies encouraging the creation of off-street loading facilities for commercial vehicles and making off-street parking more attractive for passenger vehicles may help reduce the incidence of illegal commercial vehicle parking.

  • 出版日期2015