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Journal Article

Citation

Karpinski E. Case Stud. Transp. Policy 2021; 9(3): 1313-1323.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, World Conference on Transport Research Society, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.cstp.2021.06.015

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

While many studies have studied the connection between cyclist ridership and the built environment, few findings provide relevant quantitative guidance to decision-makers. This study examines the effect of a single intervention (installation of a protected bike lane) in Boston, Massachusetts, on the nearby ridership of 'BlueBikes', a local bicycle sharing system (bikeshare). Bikeshare activity along the new protected bike lane almost tripled in the year following installation; however, ridership on routes unaffected by the new bike lane also saw dramatic increases in ridership. Using a differences-in-differences comparison, which assumes the bike lane had no influence on adjacent routes, suggests that the causal impact of the new bike lane increased bikeshare ridership +80% on affected routes. These quantitative estimates represent credible upper and lower bounds on the effect of replacing a conventional bike lane with a protected bike lane. Additional analysis also suggests that the influence of the bike lane is strongest when trip origins and destinations are a minimal distance (under 1.6 km) away from the bike lane, which may be useful information in planning bicycle networks.


Language: en

Keywords

Bicycle sharing system; Causal inference; Differences-in-differences; Multimodal infrastructure; Protected bike lanes

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