Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
L. Penny Rosenblum, Department of Disability and Psychoeducational Studies, University of Arizona

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. With the start of 2019, we're changing it up a bit! The seminar will be delivered 11:30 am (sharp) - 12:30 pm, with additional discussion over coffee and donuts afterwards. You can also watch online.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

Miss the seminar or want a look back?

THE TOPIC

People who have a visual impairment face some unique challenges when it comes to travel. What strategies can they use to bicycle safely? How do they orient and travel in unfamiliar communities? How does signage, lighting and other environmental characteristics affect their use of vision, hearing, and other senses during travel? What do they consider when selecting a travel option? After exploring some of these challenges, we will discuss considerations those designing and supporting travel infrastructures may reflect on so that travel options are user friendly and accessible to those with a variety of visual impairments.

KEY LEARNING TAKEAWAYS

  • Understand the unique transportation challenges faced by people who have a visual impairment;
  • Gain insight into how transportation professionals can help by using inclusive designs;
  • Start to collect ideas for good practices in creating user friendly, accessible travel environments.

SPEAKER

L. Penny Rosenblum, Department of Disability and Psychoeducational Studies, University of Arizona

Dr. Rosenblum is a Research Professor in the Department of Disability and Psychoeducational Studies at the University of Arizona. She has been a teacher of students with visual impairments since 1986. With Dr. Anne Corn in 2000, she co-authored Finding Wheels: A Curriculum for Non-drivers with Visual Impairments for Gaining Control of Transportation. Later this year the two will publish the book Finding Wheels: Strategies to Build Independent Travel Skills for Those with Visual Impairments. As a person with low vision, Dr. Rosenblum is able to share first-hand information with others about the impact of a visual impairment on the lives of children and adults. She lives in Tucson where she rides her bicycle over 3,000 miles a year and is a huge fan of rideshare services.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

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Penny Rosenblum is a visiting scholar, brought to Portland State University with support from the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC). The Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University is home to the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), and other transportation programs. TREC produces research and tools for transportation decision makers, develops K-12 curriculum to expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engages students and professionals through education.

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Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Anne Brown, University of Oregon

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. With the start of 2019, we're changing it up a bit! The seminar will be delivered 11:30 am (sharp) - 12:30 pm, with additional discussion over coffee and donuts afterwards. You can also watch online.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

Miss the seminar or want a look back?

THE TOPIC

Modes including ridehailing, bikeshare, and e-scooters offer the potential to revolutionize how people travel. But as cities and agencies work to integrate these new services into the existing transportation landscape, the equity implications of these modes remain murky.

This talk presents research on ridehail travel and equity from Los Angeles and compares the equity outcomes of ridehailing to the previous status quo embodied by taxis. The research highlights both the promise of new mobility services and the remaining obstacles to delivering equitable access. Findings yields implications for policies that cities and planners can advance to ensure that new travel modes boost mobility for all, not just some, travelers.

KEY LEARNING TAKEAWAYS

  • Ridehail services extend car access to neighborhoods previously excluded by taxi services.
  • Ridehailing nearly eliminates the stark racial discrimination that occurs on taxis.
  • Banking and smartphone access remain critical barriers to shared mobility access.
  • Equity-first goals, clear metrics, and data are needed to deliver equitable access to new mobility.

THE RESEARCH

Learn more about the research referenced in this presentation:

SPEAKER

Anne Brown, University of Oregon

Anne Brown is an Assistant Professor in the School of Planning, Public Policy, and Management at the University of Oregon. Her research examines equity, shared and innovative mobility, travel behavior, and transportation finance.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

LEARN MORE

Sign up for our newsletter to receive monthly updates.

The Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University is home to the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), and other transportation programs. TREC produces research and tools for transportation decision makers, develops K-12 curriculum to expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engages students and young professionals through education.

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Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Autumn Shafer, University of Oregon

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

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OVERVIEW

Today’s youth are tomorrow’s riders, bikers, walkers, voters, and transportation planners. As more transit agencies begin to offer free fare passes to public middle and high school students, it is important to have good communication strategy in place to encourage transit usage so they don't miss out on the potential to affect behavior change.

Thus, transit agencies need to develop age-appropriate messaging strategies and tactics that promote youth car-free mobility. 

This webinar will present results from a NITC research project that sought to create and evaluate communication messaging that fosters more positive attitudes, intentions, and behaviors related to transit and other car-free transportation options among Portland youth. While there is no "one size fits all" approach, the Portland-based findings may yield insights that could be adapted for application in other regions.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Understand the car-free mobility-related attitudes, intentions, and behaviors of teens in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area;
  • Identify communication channels and settings that could be most effective with youth in regards to transportation system information and promotion;
  • Study the data to learn how strategic themes promoting car-free mobility were perceived by Oregon youth.

THE RESEARCH

This webinar is based on a study funded by the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC) and conducted at the University of Oregon. Read more about the NITC research: What Encourages Portland Youth to Choose Car-Free Mobility?

SPEAKERS

Autumn Shafer, University of Oregon

Autumn Shafer is an assistant professor in the University of Oregon's School of Journalism and Communication. Her research seeks to address important social, theoretical, and practical issues related to public health promotion and social issues advocacy. She has a student-centered approach to teaching and seeks to create a collaborative and inclusive classroom environment where students feel both challenged and supported as they learn. Her research has included grant-funded projects examining the effects of entertainment education on teen pregnancy, developing a sexual consent awareness campaign, encouraging parents of children with eating disorders to take care of themselves to prevent caregiver fatigue, and cervical cancer prevention through the promotion of HPV vaccines. Shafer’s professional experience includes being a political campaign manager, field director, and legislative aide in Washington state.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute webinar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

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This webinar is hosted by the Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University. The research was funded by the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), a program of TREC and one of five U.S. Department of Transportation national university transportation centers. The NITC program is a Portland State-led partnership with the University of Oregon, Oregon Institute of Technology, University of Utah and new partners University of Arizona and University of Texas at Arlington. We pursue our theme — improving mobility of people and goods to build strong communities — through research, education and technology transfer.

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Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Andrew H. Aebi, City of Portland

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. With the start of 2019, we're changing it up a bit! The seminar will be delivered 11:30 am (sharp) - 12:30 pm, with additional discussion over coffee and donuts afterwards. You can also watch online. Periodically, we're teaming up with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) to bring you special editions—featuring guest speakers from PBOT—merging our seminar series and the long-standing PBOT Lunch & Learn.

SEMINAR UPDATE: We had a change in speakers for May 17th. The  "PBOT Edition: Enhanced Transit Corridors in Portland" seminar will instead be held on July 26 (register here: https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/3744573064539595011) and this May 17th event will instead feature:

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

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THE TOPIC (PBOT EDITION)

The planning process identifies community needs but often needs the creative use of financial leverage to make those projects a reality on the ground.  Timing is important on LIDs, and the window of opportunity is often short.

For Portland's Bureau of Transportation, managing the public's desire for streets in good condition with room to walk and bike safely and accommodating freight movement and population growth can be a tall order.  Add in the need to work with water, sewer and underground utilities, and things get complicated.

When needs exceed resources, smart strategies can help fill the gap. Andrew Aebi, Portland’s LID Administrator, will discuss four LID projects which will provide better walking and biking options for residents, improve infrastructure, and support smart land use for Portland's growing population.  Most importantly, he will describe how creative problem-solving and careful negotiation can successfully achieve commitments to fund the projects and improve neighborhoods.

KEY LEARNING TAKEAWAYS

  • Gain insight into discovering diverse needs and leveraging a variety of funding sources to create comprehensive rather than piecemeal solutions
  • Learn about working with public and private partners to create a package with multiple benefits
  • Collect ideas for creating consensus among residents, city staff and elected officials to move from problem to plan to an approved project
  • Property owners can be part of the project solution; make the business case that a project will add value in response to a demonstrated need, and the success rate may surprise you.

SPEAKER

Andrew Aebi, Capital Projects Manager, Portland Bureau of Transportation and City of Portland Local Improvement District (LID) Administrator

Andrew H. Aebi is the City of Portland's Local Improvement District (LID) Administrator. Mr. Aebi also fulfills a dual role as a senior capital project manager for the Portland Bureau of Transportation. He has administered $160 million in LIDs since 2001 and is currently managing 13 street, sidewalk, and stormwater projects with combined budgets in excess of $54 million, with most funding from LIDs. He has also provided finance leadership on sanitary sewer, water main, traffic signal, utility undergrounding and aerial tram improvements and assists other project managers and elected officials with the use of LID tools. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Economics from Lewis & Clark College and a Master’s in Business Administration with a concentration in finance from the University of Portland. He was formerly was a senior financial analyst for Intel Corporation in Hillsboro and served in multiple capacities for the Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District of Oregon.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

LEARN MORE

Sign up for our newsletter to receive monthly updates.

The City of Portland Bureau of Transportation is a community partner in shaping a livable city. They plan, build, manage and maintain an effective and safe transportation system that provides people and businesses access and mobility. PBOT keeps Portland moving.

 The Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University is home to the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), and other transportation programs. TREC produces research and tools for transportation decision makers, develops K-12 curriculum to expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engages students and young professionals through education.

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Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Dr. Gonçalo Correia, TU Delft University

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. With the start of 2019, we're changing it up a bit! The seminar will be delivered 11:30 am (sharp) - 12:30 pm, with additional discussion over coffee and donuts from 12:30 to 1:00 pm. You can also watch online.

This week's seminar is part of a larger celebration of research at Portland State University: Research Week (May 3 - 10, 2019). This week-long series of events is intended to honor and call attention to the exceptional research, including scholarship and creativity, of Portland State University faculty members and students.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

Miss the seminar or want a look back?

THE TOPIC

Automated driving has become a hot topic of research in different fields of science. Despite the great advancements in the vehicle technology itself, researchers are now concerned in figuring out what will be the impacts of these vehicles in life as we know it. These impacts can be rather broad from traffic safety to the economy. In this lecture, Goncalo will focus on the research that is being done at TU Delft, a leading university in automated vehicles’ (AVs) impacts research, focusing on urban areas and how mobility, and even the city itself, can change with fully-automated vehicles. Goncalo Correia will be covering impacts on the value of travel time, traffic congestion, land use, among others. This is work in progress that requires the involvement of all researchers interested in the topic, thus, in that sense, the lecture is intended more to foster research questions and methods than on giving final answers, which are still a bit far away.

Kelly Clifton and Chris Monsere of the Maseeh College of Engineering and Computer Science will lead a discussion with Goncalo about various aspects of AVs and their impacts on the future transportation.

KEY LEARNING TAKEAWAYS

  • Highlight the impacts of automated vehicles on traffic congestion, travel time, and land use.
  • Learn what questions are being asked by researchers and how those results can inform practice.
  • Understand how to critically asses automated vehicles in urban areas.

SPEAKERS

Dr. Gonçalo Correia, Assistant Professor in Civil Engineering and Geosciences, TU Delft University

Gonçalo H. A. Correia is an assistant professor in multi-modal urban transport networks at the Department of Transport & Planning, TU Delft. His research focuses on transport demand management through the study of integrated transportation, intelligent transport systems, travel behavior change and land use interactions. He uses mainly optimization, simulation, and theory of utility maximization for analyzing, testing and forecasting transport networks supply and demand. He is currently working on unraveling the future with automated vehicles, especially on urbanized regions. He has published 40 research papers in top scientific journals and he is part of the editorial board of several transportation science journals including transportation research part C: emerging technologies and transportation research Part E: logistics and transportation review. He is currently an associate editor of the IEEE Intelligent Transportation Systems Magazine. He has taught 13 courses on transport planning and operations research in Portugal and in the Netherlands and supervised more than 30 master thesis in transportation modeling. He advises several companies and institutions on the future of mobility and he is an international speaker on the impacts of mobility innovations.

Dr. Kelly Clifton, Associate Dean Of Research, Professor Of Civil And Environmental Engineering, Portland State University

Dr. Clifton is a professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Portland State University. She holds an affiliate appointment in the Urban Studies and Planning Program and is a fellow in the Institute for Sustainable Solutions. Her research, teaching and service activities are focused on transportation and how human mobility is shaped by needs, activity demand, urban context, and technology. She is an internationally recognized expert on transport and land use interactions, travel behavior, pedestrian modeling, and equity in transportation policy. She bridges the fields of transportation engineering and planning and is known for qualitative and quantitative methodological research methods.

She is serving as an Hans Fischer Senior Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies at the Technical University of Munich until 2020, where she is working in the Modeling Spatial Mobility lab to incorporate pedestrian modeling into land use-transport interaction models and health impact assessments. She has presented in over 150 academic and professional conferences and has over 50 publications in peer-reviewed journals. Dr. Clifton has a PhD in Community and Regional Planning from the University of Texas at Austin, MS in Planning from the University of Arizona, and BS in Mechanical Engineering from West Virginia University.

Dr. Chris Monsere, Department Chair & Associate Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Portland State University

Dr. Christopher M. Monsere is Professor and Chair of Civil and Environmental Engineering in the in the Maseeh College of Engineering & Computer Science at Portland State University. He is also an affiliated faculty member of the School of Urban Studies & Planning (USP). Monsere received his BSCE from the University of Detroit Mercy (Detroit, Michigan) in 1995; his MSCE with an emphasis in transportation from Iowa State University (Ames, Iowa) in 1997; and his Ph.D. in civil engineering at Iowa State University in 2001. Dr. Monsere’s current research agenda broadly covers the area of multimodal transportation safety; management and dissemination of large transportation datasets.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

LEARN MORE

Sign up for our newsletter to receive monthly updates.

Gonçalo Correia is a visiting scholar, brought to Portland State University with support from the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC). The Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University is home to the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), and other transportation programs. TREC produces research and tools for transportation decision makers, develops K-12 curriculum to expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engages students and young professionals through education.

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Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Sean Loughran and Mike Coleman, Port of Portland

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. You can join us in person at 11:30 AM, or you can also watch online.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC

If you like PDX now, wait till you see PDX Next.

We’re outgrowing our current digs. In the coming years, we expect our annual passengers to jump from 20 million to 35 million. Over the next five years, a series of transformative projects will bring more Pacific Northwest-inspired architecture, local restaurants and shops, inclusive design, and carbon footprint-reducing technology. We’re rolling out a series of improvements over the next few years so that your trip to and from PDX is easier and speedier. We’re making space for light-rail and bike-path enhancements. A dedicated ride hailing pickup area will streamline the entire experience. A new flexible transit hub will add close-in parking spots and bring all car rentals on-site.

Among the largest projects in the airport’s history, the iconic new terminal will double the size of the current ticketing and lobby area when it opens. This cornerstone project will give us the flexibility to meet the demands of the future, all while capturing the signature spirit of the Pacific Northwest and keeping the heart and soul of PDX intact.

KEY LEARNING TAKEAWAYS

  • PDX's "Airport Futures" master planning effort replaced the traditional conditional use approval process with new Airport Plan District.
  • Designing for the future with resilience, versatility, inclusion, innovation, environmental responsibility, and customer experience in mind.
  • Success through interdependency and coordination with public and private partners.

SPEAKERS

Mike Coleman, Aviation Planner and Project Developer at Port of Portland

Mike Coleman specializes in planning, developing, and optimizing landside transportation components of PDX. Mike is a seasoned 35-year transportation practitioner in the Portland region.

Sean Loughran, Senior Manager, Long Range Planning at Port of Portland

Sean Loughran is the Port of Portland’s Senior Manager of Long-Range Planning. Sean has 25 years of experience in land use, transportation, natural resource planning, property acquisition and airport management. Sean’s ability to capture the relationship the between airport and community has served to make Portland International Airport the much-loved airport that it is today.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

LEARN MORE

Sign up for our newsletter to receive monthly updates.

Photo Credit: joshuaraineyphotography, iStockphoto.com

The Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University is home to the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), and other transportation programs. TREC produces research and tools for transportation decision makers, develops K-12 curriculum to expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engages students and professionals through education.

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E-bikes are one of the most powerful tools in a transportation practitioner's toolbox. This emerging mode has the potential to reduce traffic congestion, improve public health, make cities more accessible, and lower greenhouse gas emissions.  

Under the leadership of TREC's sustainable transportation program manager, John MacArthur, TREC has developed a wealth of research around electric mobility options such as e-bikes and e-scooters. 

Browse through some of these projects below, or explore all our projects on e-mobility.

We have also presented a variety of webinars and online seminars focused on this topic, and are always adding more. See the YouTube playlist of our online education in electric vehicles and e-bikes.

E-Bike Incentive Programs in North America

In July 2022, TREC researchers launched a national stated preference survey aimed at learning the potential effects of different rebate methods, cash amounts, demographics and other factors. This will yield even more insight into what affects people's decision-making, and which types of incentive programs may hit the sweet spot.

In May 2022 the research team released a new white paper from this ongoing study, "Using E-Bike Incentive Programs to Expand the Market – Trends and Best Practices", and hosted a recorded online seminar on this white paper.

In January 2022 the team released their live E-Bike Incentive Programs in North America table to track e-bike purchase incentive programs in the United States and Canada. This information is intended to provide a point of reference for the development of future e-bike incentive programs and policies, or for further research on the topic.

Key details are provided for each program, which includes detailed information on:

  • Country, State, Location – Location that the program is available in.
  • Administrator, Admin. Type – The program administrator and the administrator’s entity type.
  • Status – Whether the program is currently active, closed, or otherwise.
  • Incentive Style – How the incentive amount is determined.
  • Discount Mechanism – How the incentive value is delivered to the recipient.
  • Discount Rate – Incentive rate if the incentive is a percentage of e-bike purchase price.
  • Minimum Purchase/Fee – Minimum required purchase price to qualify for the incentive, or the fee required to participate in loan-to-own programs.
  • Maximum Incentive – Maximum incentive amount if the incentive is a percentage of e-bike purchase price. Incentive amount if the incentive is a flat rate.
  • Total Earmark – Total program funding.
  • Income-Qualified? – Is participation in the program restricted to a certain income level?
  • Low-Income Option? – Are additional incentives available to people at certain income levels?
  • Low-Income Threshold – Income limit to receive low-income benefits.
  • Details/Links – Further details if required for program comprehension, links to program websites or news releases.
  • Parent/Child Program – Indication of whether a program exists as a sub-program for a larger piece of legislation, or is a ‘parent’ of other sub-programs.

This was developed using web searches, google alerts, and an existing incentive program tracker provided by PeopleForBikes. The list is updated periodically (see update date at top of sheet) to reflect newly-implemented or proposed programs, current program status, or to include programs not in the current database.

If you have comments, edits, questions or additions, please email John MacArthur (macarthur@pdx.edu)

Novel Approaches to Model Travel Behavior and Sustainability Impacts of E-Bike Use

Researchers at University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Portland State University, University of Pittsburgh, and Bosch E-Bike Systems received funding from the National Science Foundation to measure real-world travel behavior and assess the sustainability impacts of those choices. Current practices of tracking e-bike data rely on memory recall and self-reporting from the user. This study instead leveraged smartphones to conduct ad-hoc travel surveys to supplement passive data collection and, using machine learning algorithms, create the largest and richest dataset to support the growth of e-bike use as a transportation option.

Electric Vehicle Incentive Cost and Impact Tool

This online tool enables policymakers, public stakeholders, and advocates to quickly visualize the potential outcomes of an electric vehicle incentive program made up of several vehicle types. The tool estimates the cost efficiency of a proposed program in terms of the cost per kg CO2 avoided by each mode over the course of one year. It also takes the proposed budget into consideration to calculate the potential number of incentives to be made available and the amount of total CO2 that would be avoided due to internal combustion engine automobile VMT displacement.

Access the online Electric Vehicle Incentive Cost and Impact Tool, or read more about how to use the online tool. Learn about the 2021 proposed E-Bike Act, citing our e-bike studies, from Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.) and Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.)

Estimating the Effect of E-Bikes on Person Miles Travelled and Greenhouse Gas Emissions 

Many U.S. cities have climate crisis goals for reducing automotive vehicles miles traveled (VMT) in order to reduce tailpipe emissions. How do we reach the untapped potential for new bicyclists? Wider adoption of e-bikes might be the answer. This white paper found that, given a 15% e-bike mode share in Portland, Oregon, the city's CO2 emissions would be reduced by over 900 metric tons per day. The researchers conclude that the strategy of increasing e-bike mode share can be used confidently as a tool to help meet carbon emission reduction goals. Learn more about Estimating the Effect of E-Bikes on Person Miles Travelled and Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Read the 2020 journal article "The E-Bike Potential: Estimating regional e-bike impacts on greenhouse gas emissions" (updated model and findings) or the original 2019 white paper (PDF).

How E-Bike Incentive Programs are Used to Expand the Market

Research has demonstrated that the high cost of e-bikes was a barrier to entry. This white paper explores techniques to develop and structure e-bike incentive programs to reduce that barrier. Four main program structures were identified: Partial Purchase Subsidies, Vendor-Funded Discounts, Employer-Sponsored Programs, and Government Sponsored Loans. After an international inventory of existing programs, the researchers found that the most popular were partial purchase subsidies.

Download the White Paper "How E-Bike Incentive Programs are Used to Expand the Market" (PDF).

Taxonomy and Classification of Powered Micromobility Vehicles

As a member of SAE International's Powered Micromobility Vehicles Committee, MacArthur helped co-author a technical report on Taxonomy and Classification of Powered Micromobility Vehicles. These vehicles may be privately owned or available via shared- or rental-fleet operations. This report does not provide specifications or impose design requirements for powered micromobility vehicles. SAE International, previously known as the Society of Automotive Engineers, is a U.S.-based, globally active professional association that develops standards for engineering professionals in the mobility industry.

A North American Survey of Electric Bicycle Owners

Widespread adoption of bike commuting could improve public health through increased physical activity and reduced carbon emissions, as well as ease the burden on congested roads. However different lifestyle demands, physical ableness, and varied topography create an unequal playing field that prevents many from replacing their car trips. E-bikes could bridge this gap. If substituted for car use, e-bikes could substantially improve efficiency in the transportation system while creating a more inclusive biking culture for people of all ages and abilities.

Learn more about the North American Survey of Electric Bicycle Owners.

Evaluation of Electric Bike Use at Three Kaiser Permanente NW Employment Centers in Portland Metro Region

In 2015, participants from three Kaiser Permanente Northwest campuses were issued an e-bike for 10 weeks and were asked to complete surveys about the experience. Results show that participants biked more often and to a wider variety of places than before the study; they become more confident cyclists; and they cited fewer barriers to cycling when given the opportunity to use an e-bike. This study’s findings support the general hypothesis that e-bikes enable users to bike to more distant locations, bike more frequently and allow a broader participation in cycling for certain segments of the population.

Learn more about this Evaluation of Electric Bike Use at Three Kaiser Permanente NW Employment Centers in Portland Metro Region.

Differences of Cycling Experiences and Perceptions between E-Bike and Bicycle Users in the United States

This paper investigates the differences of the cycling experience and perceptions between e-bike and conventional bicycle users. The results show that e-bikes play a more important role in utilitarian travel, such as commuting and running errands, compared to a conventional bicycle. Conventional bicycle-owning respondents use their bicycles more for recreation and exercise. Also, e-bike owners tend to bike longer distances and take more trips per week. These findings begin to provide insight and a profile of potential new markets for e-bikes in the United States.

Access the journal article on "Differences of Cycling Experiences and Perceptions between E-Bike and Bicycle Users in the United States."

One major research effort at TREC has to do with active transportation data fusion.

What is Data Fusion?

Data Fusion refers to the combining of multiple data sources into one model, in order to leverage the advantages of each source and ensure the model is as accurate as possible.

Learn more about how this works in a recorded seminar from March 2025.

The Basic Idea

Traditional permanent and short-term counting methods can directly provide counts, but are limited to certain locations or short periods of time. Meanwhile, crowdsourced data (such as Strava or StreetLight) can cover a wider area but with less accuracy, as they only capture a subset of users. Fusing the two methods together–potentially with the use of deep learning algorithms–is a promising way to get the best of both. 

The Research

These research efforts got underway in 2018 with funding from the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC). NITC launched a pooled fund project with support from the DOTs of Oregon, Virginia, Colorado, Utah, and the District of Columbia, as well as Central Lane MPO and the Cities of Portland and Bend, Oregon. With matching funds from NITC, those agencies came together to fund the initial project Exploring Data Fusion Techniques to Estimate Network-Wide Bicycle Volumes, with a research team led by Sirisha Kothuri.

Subsequent projects by Kothuri and her team include:

This emerging method allows transportation agencies and state departments of transportation (DOTs) to track changes in walking and bicycling mode share over time, prioritize projects, plan and design new infrastructure, conduct safety analyses, and estimate public health impacts.

Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Matt Kelly, Portland Bureau of Transportation

Periodically, we're teaming up with the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) to bring you special editions—featuring guest speakers from PBOT—merging our seminar series and the long-standing PBOT Lunch & Learn. This seminar is part two of a two-part series on Vision Zero. See part one with Anamaria Perez.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC

Speed is a key factor in how people experience Portland’s streets. Appropriate speeds help prevent crashes, reduce the harmful consequences of crashes, and can help streets become more comfortable and sociable spaces that support a variety of travel modes and uses. The Portland Bureau of Transportation will share information on how the City of Portland is supporting safe travel speeds through its Vision Zero work. Topics will include the left turn calming pilot project, speed safety cameras, speed limit reductions, and road reorganizations. Data on the results of these interventions will be shared, along with discussion of next steps for helping people travel at safe speeds in Portland.

Visit the City of Portland's Vision Zero site for their 2019 update to Portland's Vision Zero Action Plan.

KEY LEARNING TAKEAWAYS

  • Speed is a core aspect of designing streets for safety and comfort.
  • Portland is using a variety of tools to support safe speeds, including at intersections.
  • Managing speeds on multilane arterial streets remains a challenge.

SPEAKER

Matt Kelly, Portland Bureau of Transportation

Matt Kelly is a Vision Zero Specialist at the Bureau of Transportation in Portland, Oregon; it is a position he has held since 2015. He has two Master’s degrees from the University of Michigan in Urban Planning and in Communications.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute seminar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

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The Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University is home to the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), and other transportation programs. TREC produces research and tools for transportation decision makers, develops K-12 curriculum to expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engages students and professionals through education.

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Seminar or Event
Webinars
SPEAKERS
Xianfeng (Terry) Yang, University of Utah

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

OVERVIEW

It can be expected that connected vehicles (CVs) systems will soon go beyond testbed and appear in real-world applications. To accommodate a large number of connected vehicles on the roads, traffic signal control systems on signalized arterials would require supports of various components such as roadside infrastructure, vehicle on-board devices, an effective communication network, and optimal control algorithms. In this project, we aim to establish a real-time and adaptive system for supporting the operations of CV-based traffic signal control functions. The proposed system will prioritize the communication needs of different types of CVs and best utilize the capacity of the communication channels. The CV data sensing and acquisition protocol, built on a newly developed concept of Age of Information (AoI), will support the feedback control loop to adjust signal timing plans.

Our multidisciplinary research team, including researchers from transportation engineering and electrical engineering, will carry out the project tasks along four directions that capitalized on the PIs’ expertise:

  1. Data collection and communication, in which the proposed system will be based on the AoI, prioritize the data needs of different types of CVs, and optimize the communication network;
  2. Dynamic traffic signal coordination, which will concurrently facilitate the progression of traffic flows along multiple critical paths;
  3. Smart traffic signal control, where both operational efficiency and safety improvement are accounted for at signalized intersections; and
  4. Multimodal system design, which will integrate transit signal priority (TSP) and suppression controls for accommodating connected buses.

This project addresses the urgent needs in CV system designs and offers control foundations to support the operations of urban signalized arterial in a CV environment.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Identify the data collection and communication challenges in connected vehicle-based systems.
  • Design dynamic signal coordination plan under the connected vehicle environment.
  • Develop smart and multi-modal traffic signal control system.

THE RESEARCH

This webinar is based on a study funded by the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC) and conducted at the University of Utah. Read more about the NITC research: Connected Vehicle System Design for Signalized Arterials.

SPEAKERS

Xianfeng Terry Yang, University of Utah

Dr. Yang is an Assistant Professor in Transportation Engineering at the University of Utah. He received his Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in Civil Engineering from University of Maryland, College Park and received his B.S. degree in Civil Engineering from Tsinghua University (Beijing, China). His current research areas includes evacuation planning and operation, traffic operations with connected automated vehicles, intelligent transportation system, traffic safety, network flow modeling, and unconventional intersection design. His research is sponsored by NSF, USDOT, FHWA, UDOT, and MSHA. He is the member of TRB Traffic Signal System and Emergency Evacuations committees. He is also an Associate Editor of ASCE Journal of Urban Planning and Development and panelist of NSF and NCHRP.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

This 60-minute webinar is eligible for 1 hour of professional development credit for AICP (see our provider summary). We provide an electronic attendance certificate for other types of certification maintenance.

LEARN MORE

Sign up for our newsletter to get updates on our events.

Image by metamorworks/iStock

This webinar is hosted by the Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University. The research was funded by the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC), a program of TREC and one of five U.S. Department of Transportation national university transportation centers. The NITC program is a Portland State-led partnership with the University of Oregon, Oregon Institute of Technology, University of Utah and new partners University of Arizona and University of Texas at Arlington. We pursue our theme — improving mobility of people and goods to build strong communities — through research, education and technology transfer.

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