What do residential lotteries show us about transportation choices?

Credibly identifying how the built environment shapes behaviour is empirically challenging, because people select residential locations based on differing constraints and preferences for site amenities. Our study overcomes these research barriers by leveraging San Francisco’s affordable housing lott...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urban studies (Edinburgh, Scotland) Scotland), 2022-02, Vol.59 (2), p.434-452
Hauptverfasser: Millard-Ball, Adam, West, Jeremy, Rezaei, Nazanin, Desai, Garima
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container_title Urban studies (Edinburgh, Scotland)
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creator Millard-Ball, Adam
West, Jeremy
Rezaei, Nazanin
Desai, Garima
description Credibly identifying how the built environment shapes behaviour is empirically challenging, because people select residential locations based on differing constraints and preferences for site amenities. Our study overcomes these research barriers by leveraging San Francisco’s affordable housing lotteries, which randomly allow specific households to move to specific residences. Using administrative data, we demonstrate that lottery-winning households’ baseline preferences are uncorrelated with their allotted residential features such as public transportation accessibility, parking availability and bicycle infrastructure – meaning that neighbourhood attributes and a building’s parking supply are effectively assigned at random. Surveying the households, we find that these attributes significantly affect transportation mode choices. Most notably, we show that essentially random variation in on-site parking availability greatly changes households’ car ownership decisions and driving frequency, with substitution away from public transport. In contrast, we find that parking availability does not affect employment or job mobility. Overall, the evidence from our study robustly supports that local features of the built environment are important determinants of transportation behaviour.
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; PAIS Index; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Access
Affordable housing
Attributes
Availability
Bicycles
Built environment
Employment
Households
Infrastructure
Lotteries
Mobility
Neighborhoods
Occupational mobility
Ownership
Parking
Public transportation
Residential location
Surveying
Urban environments
title What do residential lotteries show us about transportation choices?
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