Thursday, January 03, 2008

TDM sessions at 2008 Transportation Research Board

Transportation Research Board (www.trb.org) 87th Annual Meeting will be held in Washington DC on January 13-17, 2008. There are many sessions related to transportation demend management (TDM) and a long list of papers. Links below take you to abstracts for each paper that was sponsored by the Transportation Demand Management Committee. There are other TDM-related sessions on topics such as high occupancy toll facilities, telework, carsharing, etc. Please go to TRB's Interactive Program http://www.trb.org/am/ip/ to find the sessions that appeal to your interests.

Poster Session 253 Transportation Demand Management and Parking Strategies: New Tools and Approaches
Monday, January 14, 2008, 9:30 AM - 12:00 PM, Hilton

Lori Diggins, LDA Consulting, presiding
Sponsored by: Transportation Demand Management Committee (ABE50)

  • Vehicle Occupancy Trends in Florida: Evidence from Traffic Accident Records (08-3089) - C11 Albert Gan, Florida International University and Kaiyu Liu, Florida International University
  • Estimating Societal Benefits and Costs of Transportation Demand Management (08-2651) - C9 Sisinnio Concas, University of South Florida and Philip L. Winters, University of South Florida
  • Macrolevel Collision Prediction Models to Evaluate Road Safety Effects of Mobility Management Strategies: New Empirical Tools to Promote Sustainable Development (08-2385) - C7 Gordon Richard Lovegrove, University of British Columbia, Canada and Todd Alexander Litman, Victoria Transport Policy Institute, Canada
  • Park and Bike: New Multimodal Concept for Congested Areas (08-0411) - C5 Ilona Bos, University of Nijmegen, NetherlandsArnoud van de Vrugt, Keypoint Consultancy, Netherlands
  • Modeling Car Park Choice in Urban Areas and Managing Demand for Parking (08-1191) - D6 Narasimha Chandrasekhar Balijepalli, University of Leeds, United Kingdom, Simon Shepherd, University of Leeds, United Kingdom, and Anthony May, University of Leeds, United Kingdom
  • Modeling Parking Choice Behavior in Business Areas (08-1539) - D4Peter J.H.J. Van der Waerden, Eindhoven University of Technology, NetherlandsAloys Borgers, Eindhoven University of Technology, NetherlandsHarry J .P. Timmermans, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
  • Effects of Parking Policy on Travel Demand in Bangkok’s Commercial District (08-1679) - D8 Saksith Chalermpong, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand, and Kittiphum Kittiwangchai, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
  • Using Land Use Planning Process to Secure Travel Plans: Assessment of Progress in England (08-0962) - D2 Tom Rye, Napier University, United Kingdom, Emma Young, Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council, United Kingdom, and Stephen Ison, Loughborough University, United Kingdom
  • Role of Public Transport as Transportation Demand Management Measure (08-0909) - C3 Stephen Ison, Loughborough University, United Kingdom and Tom Rye, Napier University, United Kingdom

Transportation Demand Management Committee

Monday, January 14, 2008, 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM, Hilton

Lori Diggins, LDA Consulting, presiding
Sponsored by: Transportation Demand Management Committee (ABE50)

Parking Management Subcommittee, ABE50(1)
Monday, January 14, 2008, 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM, Hilton
Tom Rye, Napier University, United Kingdom, presiding
Sponsored by: Transportation Demand Management Committee (ABE50)


Session 707 Revisiting Traditional TDM Strategies and Breaking New TDM Ground Wednesday, January 16, 2008, 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM, Hilton
Lori Diggins, LDA Consulting, presiding
Sponsored by: Transportation Demand Management Committee (ABE50)

  • An Empirical Analysis of Compressed Work Week Choices (08-2137) Liren Zhou, University of South Florida and Philip L. Winters, University of South Florida
  • Employee Transportation Benefits in High Transit Mode Share Areas: a University Case Study (08-0916) David Block-Schachter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and John Attanucci, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Four Challenges of Incorporating Transportation Demand Management into the Land Development Process (08-2535) Sara Jane Hendricks, University of South Florida
  • Park and Ride: Lessons from the UK Experience (08-0730) Stuart Daniel Meek, Loughborough University, United Kingdom, Stephen Ison, Loughborough University, United Kingdom, Marcus Paul Enoch, Loughborough University, United Kingdom

Session 729 Driver Response to Urban Parking Parameters

Wednesday, January 16, 2008, 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM, Hilton

Philip L. Winters, University of South Florida, presiding
Sponsored by: Transportation Demand Management Committee (ABE50) and the
New Public Transportation Systems and Technology Committee (AP020)

  • Reassessing On-Street Parking (08-2926)Wesley Marshall, University of Connecticut, Norman Garrick, University of Connecticut, and Gilbert Hansen, University of Connecticut
  • Social Experiment of Cooperative Dynamic Park-and-Ride in Japan (08-2224)Kunihiro Sakamoto, Saitama University, Japan
  • Evaluating Urban Parking Policies with Agent-Based Model of Driver Parking Behavior (08-0341)Karel Martens, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands, Itzhak Benenson, Tel Aviv University, Israel, and Slava Birfir, Tel Aviv University, Israel
  • Smart Parking Linked to Transit: Lessons Learned from the San Francisco Bay Area Field Test (08-3027) Susan A. Shaheen, University of California, Berkeley, and Charlene R. Kemmerer, University of California, Berkeley