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Transportation impacts of center-based telecommuting: Interim findings from the Neighborhood Telecenters Project
Authors:Balepur  Prashant N  Varma  Krishna V  Mokhtarian  Patricia L
Institution:(1) Decision Focus, Inc., 650 Castro Street, Suite 300, Mountain View, CA 94041;(2) Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Institute of Transportation Studies, University of California, Davis, CA, 95616; E-mail
Abstract:The transportation impacts of center-based telecommuting for 24 participants (representing 69 person-days of travel and 295 trips) in the California Neighborhood Telecenters Project are analyzed. Comparing non-telecommuting (NTC) day to telecommuting (TC) day travel shows that person-trips did not change significantly, whereas vehicle-trips increased significantly (by about one trip) on TC days. Both PMT and VMT decline significantly on TC days: by an average of 68 miles (74%) and 38 miles (65%), respectively. When these savings are weighted by the frequency of telecommuting, overall reductions in PMT and VMT come to 19% and 17%, respectively, of total weekday travel. Commute trips increase slightly (by 0.5 trips) but significantly, mainly due to lunch-time trips made home from the telecenter. Total non-commute travel does not increase, but there is a significant shift from other modes to driving alone on TC days. Commute mode split on NTC days is not affected by telecommuting. Travel on TC days tends to be compressed into fewer hours. Higher numbers of return home, eat meal, shopping, and social/recreational trips are made on TC days, in exchange for a reduction (to zero) in the number of change mode trips.
Keywords:telecommuting  telecommuting centers  transportation demand management  trip diaries
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