Expanding a (electric) bicycle-sharing system to a new city
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Date
2020-01Type
- Other Conference Item
ETH Bibliography
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Abstract
The number of bicycle-sharing systems has undergone strong growth in the last two decades. This growth is part of a worldwide trend that has began in the 1990s and has strongly accelerated after 2005. Early bicycle-sharing systems have mainly been provided as a public service by cities, but meanwhile major international bicycle-sharing companies have emerged that seek to expand their operations to new cities. Two major strategic questions that arise are which cities should be considered for an expansion and the geographical extent of the service area. An important factor to support these decisions is expected demand for bicycle-sharing, as it is directly related to potential revenue. In this paper, booking data from an electric bicycle-sharing system was used to estimate and assess models for bicycle-sharing demand and to make predictions for an expansion to a new city. Employment, population, bars and restaurants and distance to a central location were among the most important predictors in terms of variance explained in the same city. However, omitting centrality measures improved predictions for the new city. Show more
Publication status
publishedBook title
2020 TRB Annual Meeting OnlinePages / Article No.
Publisher
Transportation Research BoardEvent
Subject
E-bike sharing; Bicycle-sharing; Demand prediction; Sharing economy; Spatial regression; Machine learning; Random forestsOrganisational unit
02890 - Inst. of Science, Technology and Policy / Inst. of Science, Technology and Policy03521 - Axhausen, Kay W. (emeritus) / Axhausen, Kay W. (emeritus)
02655 - Netzwerk Stadt u. Landschaft ARCH u BAUG / Network City and Landscape ARCH and BAUG
Related publications and datasets
Is new version of: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000356142
Notes
Poster presentation on January 15, 2020More
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