Digital Library on Green Mobility

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Scoot Over: Determinants of Shared Electric Scooter Presence in Washington D.C

Publication Year: 2021

Author(s): Hawa L, Cui B, Sun L, El-Geneidy A

Abstract:

Micro mobility, including the use of shared electric scooters (e-scooters), emerged rapidly in North America and is marketed as an alternative to car reliance, especially for short-distance travel in urban settings. This study aims to contribute to our understanding of how shared e-scooters are used by examining the factors that determine the presence of e-scooters and those that cause variation in e-scooter presence between each consecutive hour and throughout the day. The objective of this study is to investigate how temporal, land use, transport infrastructure, and weather attributes impact available e-scooter distribution and variation in e-scooter presence in Washington D.C., to reveal use patterns and develop a framework for studying citywide e-scooter systems. Data on the location of e-scooters in the Washington D.C. area over six full days was collected. Then, multilevel mixed-effects linear regression models were generated to investigate the impact of time, land use characteristics, and the built environment while controlling for weather conditions. The authors found that temporal effects were present, as weekends and late nights were associated with fewer e-scooters and less variation in hourly e-scooter presence. They observed that the average number of e-scooters available per 0.07 mile2 on weekends was 0.26 (7.81%) fewer than on weekdays, and 0.82 (24.62%) fewer during the late-night than other times of day, all else held constant. Higher population density, places of interest, and activities were generally associated with more e-scooters and contributed to more change in the hour-to-hour numbers of e-scooters but less variation throughout the day. The hourly change in the average numbers of e-scooters near bike-share stations was 0.19 all else held equal, and it is unclear whether e-scooters were used as first-mile, last-mile solutions for public transport. These findings can help policy-makers in cities with comparable climates, land use characteristics, and transport infrastructure. The findings can help city planners and engineers make appropriate decisions in recognizing e-scooters as an urban mobility solution, where to expect them to emerge in different parts of the city, and how e-scooters interact with established transport systems.

Source of Publication: Case Studies on Transport Policy

Vol/Issue: 9(2): 418-430p.

DOI No.: 10.1016/j.cstp.2021.01.003

Publisher/Organisation: Elsevier Ltd.

Rights: World Conference on Transport Research Society

URL:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2213624X21000031

Theme: Sustainable transportation | Subtheme: Shared mobility

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