Factors influencing the choice of shared bicycles and shared electric bikes in Beijing

•We conduct a choice experiment for conventional- and electric-bike bikeshare in Beijing.•Novel experiment method allows significant mode inertia variable in mode choice model.•E-bikeshare draws users from “sheltered” modes more than bikeshare.•E-bikeshare use is less sensitive to longer distances,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transportation research. Part C, Emerging technologies Emerging technologies, 2016-06, Vol.67, p.399-414
Hauptverfasser: Campbell, Andrew A., Cherry, Christopher R., Ryerson, Megan S., Yang, Xinmiao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We conduct a choice experiment for conventional- and electric-bike bikeshare in Beijing.•Novel experiment method allows significant mode inertia variable in mode choice model.•E-bikeshare draws users from “sheltered” modes more than bikeshare.•E-bikeshare use is less sensitive to longer distances, worse air quality, and bad weather.•E-bikeshare competes with transit, but also draws from automobile modes. China leads the world in both public bikeshare and private electric bike (e-bike) growth. Current trajectories indicate the viability of deploying large-scale shared e-bike (e-bikeshare) systems in China. We employ a stated preference survey and multinomial logit to model the factors influencing the choice to switch from an existing transportation mode to bikeshare or e-bikeshare in Beijing. Demand is influenced by distinct sets of factors: the bikeshare choice is most sensitive to measures of effort and comfort while the e-bikeshare choice is more sensitive to user heterogeneities. Bikeshare demand is strongly negatively impacted by trip distance, temperature, precipitation, and poor air quality. User demographics however do not factor strongly on the bikeshare choice, indicating the mode will draw users from across the social spectrum. The e-bikeshare choice is much more tolerant of trip distance, high temperatures and poor air quality, though precipitation is also a highly negative factor. User demographics do play a significant role in e-bikeshare demand. Analysis of impact to the existing transportation system finds that both bikeshare and e-bikeshare will tend to draw users away from the “unsheltered modes”, walk, bike, and e-bike. Although it is unclear if shared bikes are an attractive “first-and-last-mile solution”, it is clear that e-bikeshare is attractive as a bus replacement.
ISSN:0968-090X
1879-2359
DOI:10.1016/j.trc.2016.03.004