+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of...

Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of...

Date post: 27-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: valentine-roberts
View: 214 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
20
Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott [email protected] The analysis and results presented here are solely the authors and do not necessarily represent official policy of the Bureau of Transportation Statistics
Transcript
Page 1: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans

Jeffery L. [email protected]

The analysis and results presented here are solely the authors and do not necessarily represent official policy of the Bureau of Transportation Statistics

Page 2: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

2001 National Household Transportation Survey

• A national survey of 60,000 individuals in 26,000 households

• Data collected from March 2001 to May 2002

• Data collected for both Daily and Long-Distance Trips

• Weighted responses

Page 3: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

NHTS Long-Distance Trips

• Trips over 50 miles to farthest destination

• Data collected for all trips during a specific 4-week period

• Each trip includes all segments of the trip, originating and ending at home

Page 4: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Mean Number of Yearly Long-Distance Trips by Gender, Driver Status, and Age Group

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75+

Age Group

Male Drivers

Female Drivers

Male Non-Drivers

Female Non-Drivers

Page 5: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• Drivers make significantly more long-distance trips than non-drivers for all age groups

• Male drivers make more trips than female drivers for all age groups, though the gap narrows with the 75+ age group

• Conversely female non-drivers make about the same or slightly more trips than male non-drivers

Page 6: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Percentage of Long-Distance Trips by Mode for Each Age Group

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75+

Age Group

Personal Veh.

Air

Bus

Other

Page 7: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• Personal vehicle is the dominant mode for long-distance trips, about 87% to 90% of all trips

• Bus use increases for higher age groups, from about 1% for the 25-54 age group, to about 6% for the 75+ age group

• The use of air travel does not vary much by age group

Page 8: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Percentage of Long-Distance Trips by Trip Purpose for Each Age Group

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75+

Age Group

Commute

Business

Pleasure

Personal Business

Other

Page 9: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• Long distance commuting and business trips decline sharply at higher age groups

• Pleasure trips increase from about 46% in the 25-54 age group to about 66% in the 75+ age group

• Personal business trips also increase from about 10% in the 25-54 age group to about 25% in the 75+ age group

Page 10: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Percentage of Trips by Trip Distance for Each Age Group

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75+

Age Group

50-99 miles

100-249 miles

250-499 miles

500-999 miles

1000+ miles

Page 11: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• There is very little change in distance traveled by different age groups

• The 65-74 age group shows the greatest variation, with somewhat fewer trips in the 50-99 mile category, and more trips in the 100-249 mile category

• The percentage of the longest trips (over a 1,000 miles) are very similar at about 6 to 7 percent of all trips for each age category

Page 12: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

NHTS Daily Trips

• Data collected for all trips on one specified day

• Travel made from one address to another is reported as a separate trip

• Specific questions and probes were added to capture biking and walking trips, thought to be undercounted in previous surveys

Page 13: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Percentage of Daily Trips, by Time Period, for Each Age Group

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75 - 84 85 +

Age Group

0-3 AM

3-6 AM

6-9 AM

9-12 AM

12-3 PM

3-6 PM

6-9 PM

9-12 PM

Page 14: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• A significant narrowing of hours trips are taken occurs at higher age groups

• The percentage of trips taken between 9-12 am and 12-3 pm goes up at higher age groups, about 62% of all trips taken by the 75+ age group are taken during these hours

• Early morning and night time periods decline at higher age groups

Page 15: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Mean Number of Daily Trips, by Gender, Driver Status, and Age Group

0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

5.0

6.0

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75 - 84 85 +

Age Group

Male Drivers

Female Drivers

Male Non-Drivers

Female Non-Drivers

Page 16: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• Mean number of trips decline at higher age groups

• Non-drivers take far fewer trips than drivers across all age groups, for example in the 85+ age group, drivers take an average of about 3 trips a day compared to about 1 trip a day for non-drivers

• Much smaller differences are observed between males and females

Page 17: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Percentage of Daily Trips, by Mode, for Each Age Group

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75 - 84 85 +

Age Group

Sing Ocup Priv Veh

Mult Ocup Priv Veh

Transit

Walk

Other

Page 18: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• Private vehicle is the dominant mode across all age groups, used in about 90% of all trips

• Multiple occupancy vehicles are used more frequently at higher age groups

• Transit use is very low, between 1% and 2%• Walking trips make up about 8% to 9% of all

trips, consistent over all age groups

Page 19: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

Percentage of Daily Trips by Trip Purpose for Each Age Group

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

25 - 54 55 - 64 65 - 74 75 - 84 85 +

Age Group

Work/Work-Related

Family/Personal

Church/School

Social/Recreational

Other

Page 20: Bureau of Transportation Statistics U.S. Department of Transportation Overall Travel Patterns of Older Americans Jeffery L. Memmott jeffery.memmott@bts.gov.

Bureau of Transportation StatisticsU.S. Department of Transportation

• Family/personal and social/recreational trips represent about 87% to 90% of all trips for older Americans

• Church/school trips represent about an additional 5% to 6% of all trips for older Americans

• Work trips decline substantially at higher age groups, but do not disappear. About 2% to 6% of all trips by older Americans are work or work related trips


Recommended