What Makes a Good Cargo Bike Route? Perspectives from Users and Planners


Journal article


George Liu, S. Nello-Deakin, M. te Brömmelstroet, Y. Yamamoto
American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 2020, pp. 941-965

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Liu, G., Nello-Deakin, S., te Brömmelstroet, M., & Yamamoto, Y. (2020). What Makes a Good Cargo Bike Route? Perspectives from Users and Planners. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 941–965.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Liu, George, S. Nello-Deakin, M. te Brömmelstroet, and Y. Yamamoto. “What Makes a Good Cargo Bike Route? Perspectives from Users and Planners.” American Journal of Economics and Sociology (2020): 941–965.


MLA   Click to copy
Liu, George, et al. “What Makes a Good Cargo Bike Route? Perspectives from Users and Planners.” American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 2020, pp. 941–65.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{george2020a,
  title = {What Makes a Good Cargo Bike Route? Perspectives from Users and Planners},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {American Journal of Economics and Sociology},
  pages = {941-965},
  author = {Liu, George and Nello-Deakin, S. and te Brömmelstroet, M. and Yamamoto, Y.}
}

Abstract

Cargo bikes—bicycles made to carry both goods and people—are becoming increasingly common as an alternative to automobiles in urban areas. With a wider and heavier body, cargo bikes often face problems even in the presence of cycling infrastructure, thus limiting their possibilities of route choice. Infrastructure quality and the route choices of cyclists have been well studied, but often solely based on a quantitative approach, leading to tools such as BLOS (bicycle level of service). With various designs of cargo bikes being used for a wide range of purposes, the route choice of cargo bike users is difficult to generalize. This study combines quantitative and qualitative approaches in order to explore what is important for cargo bike users’ route choice, and how this knowledge can be effectively used for planning. Our results suggest that while some general preferences exist, route choice involves complex dynamics that cannot be fully explained by quantitative measures alone: in addition to understanding “what” is important for cargo bike users, we need to understand “why” it is important. Furthermore, route choice is also influenced by the city context, making a study tailored to the local context essential.


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