TY - JOUR
PY - 2023//
TI - Residential relocation as a key event in commuting mode shift
JO - Transportation research part D: transport and environment
A1 - Tao, Yinhua
A1 - Petrović, Ana
A1 - van Ham, Maarten
A1 - Fu, Xingxing
SP - e103772
EP - e103772
VL - 119
IS -
N2 - Residential self-selection studies argue that pre-existing travel-related attitude overshadows the role of changes in residential built environment in (re)shaping travel behaviours. Our study contributes to this self-selection argument by including family- and job-related life events as another self-selection source, and accounting for the reverse causality from built environment to travel attitude as opposed to the attitude-induced self-selection. Using a two-wave sample of 1,038 Dutch residents before and after the relocation, we developed structural equation models to investigate longitudinal relationships between changes in residential built environment and job-housing distances, the occurrence of life events, and changes in commuting mode choices and preferences pre-post relocation.
RESULTS supported residential self-selection arising from pre-existing preferences for car and public transport commuting, while residents lowered the active commuting preference after moving to a more suburban neighbourhood. Life events concurrent with residential relocation, such as childbirth and job changes, also underlay greater demand for car use.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1361-9209 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.trd.2023.103772 ID - ref1 ER -