Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Amy Schlusser, Oregon DOE
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

Oregon has adopted policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the energy and transportation sectors. This presentation will provide some background on these policy frameworks and explore how these policies impact transportation fuels and the transportation sector more broadly.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Develop a general or better understanding of Oregon's energy and climate policy mechanisms and the interplay between them;
  • Understand how Oregon's policies impact the transportation sector;
  • Understand some of the costs, benefits, and other implications for consumers and businesses; and
  • Gain an understanding of some of the legal and regulatory constraints affecting transportation decarbonization.
LOCATION
Vanport Building room 269
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-
Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Whit Jamieson, Anna Guida, and Connor Herman; Forth Mobility
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

Transportation is the top contributor of greenhouse gas emissions in the US and light-duty vehicles are the #1 contributor to transportation emissions. Mass adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) is key in the fight toward a more sustainable future, but there are several factors that have delayed our transition to EVs.

EV charging at home is the most convenient and cost-effective charging option for EV drivers, but people living in multifamily housing face serious barriers to accessing home charging. During this session, we will explore why EV charging at multifamily housing is critical to mass adoption of EVs, barriers to charging access at multifamily developments, and potential solutions. Among the solutions discussed, we will delve into Forth's experiences with carshare located at affordable housing developments.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Until access to EV charging at home is as easy for multifamily residents as single-family home residents, EV adoption rates in MFH locations will lag.
  • EV charging infrastructure can be added to existing buildings during retrofits and should always be included in new development planning as doing so saves time and money for all.
  • Multifamily properties that plan for increased charging demand, or “future-proofing”, will have a competitive advantage over properties that do not have EV charging and are not planning for future EV adoption.
  • EV carshare programs can be a great tool to provide low-income renters access to EVs and mobility when otherwise, they may not have access to a vehicle, let alone clean transportation options.
LOCATION
Vanport Building, Room 269
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-
Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Mark Haines, PBOT; Jesse Stemmler, TriMet
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

This presentation on the Division Transit Project will provide an overview of the project elements including roadway design, bus station design, traffic signal timing and operations and the Next Gen Transit Signal Priority (TSP) system. We will discuss some lessons learned and provide before and after results from the project.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Understand key components to bus rapid transit in the Portland Region.
  • Learn about next generation transit signal priority and the groundbreaking being done to prioritize transit.
  • Hear lessons learned and the plans for future bus rapid transit in the region
LOCATION
Vanport Building room 269
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-
Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Ryan Hashagen, Better Block PDX
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

Better Block PSU works with Planning and Civil Engineering students to bring community ideas to life!  Over the last 10 years, the pathway has resulted in many real world pop ups and capital projects implemented by volunteers and PBOT.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Student work has been crucial to advancing difficult conversations within the bureaucracy & bureaus
  • Create win win opportunities to share credit with civic leaders and electeds
  • Celebrate the internal staff who are project champions
LOCATION
Vanport Building room 269
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-
Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Evan Howington, John MacArthur and Nathan McNeil; PSU
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

Bike Buses are a relatively new form of Active Transportation to School (ATS) that have gained popularity in Europe and the United States in recent years. Generally, a bike bus consists of one or more adult supervisors, often parents, who guide a group of students along a defined ‘route’ to one or more schools. Using literature from the last 15 years published on ATS in North America, we identify four thematic areas of influence on Bike Buses: school policies, parent and student attitudes and behaviors, the urban environment, and the street environment. We conclude that Bike Buses can be situated within the larger body of literature about ATS and Safe Routes to Schools (SRTS) but deserve research on their own merits for a variety of reasons. The presentation will also present findings from surveys of bike bus coordinators and parents at schools with bike buses in Portland, Oregon.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • Understand how Bike Buses fit within the larger framework of SRTS and Active Transportation to School ATS;
  • Learn about how Bike Buses are formed and operated;
  • Understand how Bike Buses are perceived by parents in encouraging more biking to school.
LOCATION
Vanport Building room 269
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-
Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Milad Ashtiani, University of Washington
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

State departments of transportation (DOTs) are increasingly focusing on reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, especially with new regulations like the Buy Clean Acts in California, Oregon, and Washington. This project, in collaboration with the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), aims to assess the agency's carbon emissions through a life cycle assessment of construction materials such as cement, concrete, steel, and asphalt, which are now under heightened scrutiny.

While WSDOT has already implemented strategies to reduce Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions (related to direct and energy-related activities), there has been limited focus on Scope 3 emissions—those generated upstream in the supply chain. This life cycle assessment reveals that Scope 3 emissions from materials used in WSDOT’s roadways contribute over half of the agency’s total GHG emissions, averaging 310 thousand metric tons of CO2 equivalent annually.

The study emphasizes the critical need to address these emissions and sets ambitious reduction targets for WSDOT: a 50% reduction below 2020 levels by 2030 and a 90% reduction by 2050. These findings and recommendations provide a pathway for WSDOT to lead in sustainable infrastructure practices, aligning with broader transportation goals to mitigate environmental impacts from construction materials.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • State Department of Transportations need better data collection and management approaches to enable greenhouse gas emissions accounting for construction materials.
  • Scope 3 emissions (mainly in the form of embodied carbon from construction materials) can be as significant as Scope 1 and 2 emissions (i.e., direct emissions from energy use and burning fossil fuels).
  • Embodied carbon decarbonization strategies for roadways rely heavily on upstream emissions from producing asphalt, concrete, and steel materials.
LOCATION
Vanport Building room 269
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-

Transportation Research at Portland State

TREC research addresses complex transportation problems by drawing on multiple disciplines from across the Portland State University campus. Browse our research areas below, or use the search box at the right to search for a specific project.

Bicycling

A person on a bike rides across a striped cross-bike green and white crosswalk

Portland State University researchers have a broad knowledge of active transportation design principles. Through our Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Design program, we host annual bikeway design workshops which draw professionals from all over the globe, and research from the TREC team has informed NACTO’s Urban Bikeway Design Guide, FHWA’s Bikeway Selection Guide, the FTA’s Manual on Bicycle and Pedestrian Connections to Transit, the FHWA’s Strategic Agenda for Pedestrian and Bicycle Transportation and many other design guidebooks. Our expertise includes protected bike lanes and intersections, bike boulevards, integrating bikes with transit, and more.

See all our projects on bicycling.

Data and Modeling 

Data-driven policy and strategy are critical to meeting transportation goals. Where there is insufficient or incomplete data, there can be no effective solutions. It’s why at Portland State University we’ve focused our research efforts over the years on filling data gaps, and why we maintain our transportation data programs. Transportation modeling is a computational approach used to analyze and predict travel behavior, traffic flow, and infrastructure needs. These models help planners and policymakers assess the impacts of new roads, public transit systems, and policy changes on congestion, emissions, and mobility.  We conduct research that pushes forward the leading edge of what transportation models are capable of, from creating intelligent, connected transportation systems to using data fusion techniques to improve multimodal transportation. One major research effort under this umbrella focuses on active transportation data fusion.

See all our projects on data and modeling.

E-mobility 

Closeup of the seat of an ebike with battery

Electric bicycles (e-bikes), electric cars, e-scooters and other electric vehicles have the potential to significantly lower carbon emissions from the transportation sector. E-bikes in particular offer promising potential to not only reduce carbon emissions, but also improve public health and increase access to active transportation. Research into e-mobility plays a crucial role in advancing sustainable transportation by improving electric vehicle adoption, multimodal infrastructure, and policy frameworks. In particular, e-bikes are one of the most powerful tools in a transportation practitioner's toolbox

See all our projects on e-mobility.

Economics and Policy 

Aerial view of a commercial area

Economics and policy play a fundamental role in shaping transportation systems. Policy drives investment decisions, infrastructure development, and mobility choices, while economic factors often determine what level of access people have to jobs, services, and essential destinations. TREC research explores the economic impacts of different kinds of transportation systems and infrastructure, as well as the economic outcomes of various transportation policy frameworks.

See all our projects on economics and policy.

Equity and Environmental Justice 

A factory next to a road

Low-income communities and communities of color often face disproportionate negative outcomes of transportation decisions, such as more exposure to air pollution from highways, limited access to reliable public transit, and displacement from their neighborhoods. Research focused on equity seeks to correct historical disparities by prioritizing investments in public transit, active transportation infrastructure, and clean mobility solutions in traditionally disadvantaged areas. By incorporating equity into transportation policies, cities can create more inclusive systems that promote social, economic, and environmental well-being for all.

See all our projects on equity and environmental justice.

Freight and Logistics 

Trucks line up at a weigh station

A strong freight and logistics network is vital for economic growth, resilience, and sustainability. A well-functioning freight system supports supply chains, enabling businesses to operate smoothly, and so plays a critical role in food security, medical supply distribution, and disaster response. PSU research explores various approach to improve logistics and the efficiency of freight transportation.

See all our projects on freight and logistics.

Infrastructure and Resiliency

Tilikum Crossing pedestrian bridge in Portland, Oregon

The strength of a transportation system depends largely on the condition of its infrastructure, from the smallest footpath to the largest freeway. And the bridges serve a crucial role in connecting those transportation systems, carrying traffic over otherwise impassible features. Considering that value, it's doubly important that bridges stand up to earthquakes, especially considering that quakes will disrupt so much else of the built environment. And so research at PSU places a special emphasis on resilience and recovery in those systems. Portland State's InfraStructure Testing and Applied Research Laboratory (iSTAR) tests the resiliency of engineered structures and their materials by reproducing the shaking of real earthquakes.

See all our projects on infrastructure and resiliency.

Land Use and Housing 

Aerial view of residential neighborhood

Portland State both reflects and advances a national reputation for considering land use and transportation together. Oregon laws emphasize the importance of transportation and land use in addressing greenhouse gas emissions and our research supports the state in leading this initiative, particularly in the area of modeling and forecasting tools. We examine transit-oriented developments to see their effects on housing, jobs and society, including low-income immigrant communities. We also look at the best ways to balance access to businesses along roadways with the need to avoid conflict between various road users. Our research serves to inform thoughtful access management policy that fosters a vibrant economy and safe road users.

See all our projects on land use and housing.

Safety 

Aerial shot of people examining a walking and biking lane

Transportation research on safety aims to protect road vulnerable users. The U.S. Department of Transportation adopts a Safe System Approach as the guiding paradigm to address roadway safety. This holistic approach, using multiple simultaneous strategies, has been embraced by the transportation community as an effective way to make traveling safer for people. Policies promoting safer infrastructure—such as protected bike lanes, pedestrian-friendly streets, and improved transit systems—enhance safety for all users. TREC's safety research evaluates strategies to prevent injuries across all transportation modes.

See all our projects on safety.

Shared Mobility 

A row of Biketown bike share e-bikes

Shared mobility refers to transportation services that allow users to access vehicles and transit resources on a shared basis, rather than owning them individually. This can include car-sharing, bike-sharing, ride-hailing (e.g., Uber, Lyft), scooter-sharing, and even shared public transit options like vanpools or microtransit. Shared mobility aims to provide flexible, cost-effective transportation solutions that reduce individual vehicle ownership, lessen traffic congestion, and support sustainable urban mobility by maximizing resource use and reducing environmental impacts.

See all our projects on shared mobility.

Traffic Engineering 

A traffic signal

Traffic engineering optimizes the movement of vehicles, cyclists, and pedestrians to enhance safety, efficiency, and sustainability. Our research into traffic engineering explores the design, operation, and management of roadways and intersections, as well as traffic control devices like signals, signs, and pavement markings. This research promotes multimodal planning, prioritizing public transit, biking, and walking to create more equitable and environmentally friendly transportation networks.

See all our projects on traffic engineering.

Transit 

A TriMet bus next to a MAX Train

Public transit systems hold promise for serving urban areas safely and efficiently. Yet challenges within transit districts and from outside factors make that service inherently difficult. Research at Portland State has offered insight to transit agencies on planning, operations and safety. And we look at the mixed-use developments designed with access to transit in mind. Our research focuses on the traffic and roadway design that affect transit planning along with operations issues such as keeping vehicles on time and evenly spaced, placing stops where they best serve goals, and scheduling drivers to promote safety and efficiency. It also includes determining which routes best meet community and agency goals and gaining a better understanding of transit users.

See all our projects on transit.

Walking

Pedestrians wait to cross the street at a crosswalk

Everyone is a pedestrian. Our research examines various aspects of pedestrian mobility, safety, infrastructure, and accessibility to improve walkability in urban and suburban environments. By analyzing pedestrian behavior and travel patterns, researchers can develop evidence-based guidelines for the design of safe infrastructure, helping to prevent injuries and enhance equity and accessibility.

See all our projects on walking.

Seminar or Event
Friday Seminars
SPEAKERS
Joe Broach, Sirisha Kothuri, and Nathan McNeil; PSU
COST
Free and open to the public

Friday Transportation Seminars at Portland State University have been a tradition since 2000. We've opened up PSU Transportation Seminars to other days of the week, but the format is the same: Feel free to bring your lunch! If you can't join us in person, you can always watch online via Zoom.

PRESENTATION ARCHIVE

THE TOPIC 

Planners and decision-makers have increasingly voiced a need for network-wide estimates of bicycling and walking. Such volume estimates have for decades informed motorized planning and analysis but have only recently become feasible for non-motorized travel modes. Recently, new sources of activity data have emerged derived primarily from GPS-based smartphone location data, both app-based and passively collected. The project team has led several research projects aimed at evaluating and integrating the emerging sources with conventional demand data, including observed bicycle and pedestrian counts, to assess the value added of various emerging sources and the potential for estimating network-wide volumes. This presentation will summarize lessons learned and propose next steps for agencies and researchers who want to incorporate big data into active transportation volume / exposure estimates.

KEY LEARNING OUTCOMES

  • The contributions and cautions of using emerging big data sources for AT volume estimates.
  • The importance of adjusting for potential bias when using big data sources.
  • The continuing value of traditional bicycle and pedestrian counters.
  • The transferability of volume estimate models across geographies and time.

SPEAKERS

Joe Broach, Portland State University

Joe Broach is a research associate at the Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University (PSU) and a Senior Researcher and Modeler at Metro, Portland’s MPO. He has more than 15 years of experience in transportation research and planning, in both academic and public agency settings. His work on non-motorized transportation modeling, behavior, and data has been widely published, incorporated into federal guidance, and used in regional travel models. He holds a PhD in Urban Studies from Portland State University and a Master’s in Economics from the University of Montana, Missoula.

Sirisha Kothuri, Portland State University

Sirisha Kothuri, Ph.D. is a senior research associate in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Portland State University. Dr. Kothuri’s primary research interests are in the areas of multimodal traffic operations, bicycle and pedestrian counting, and safety. Dr. Kothuri is the research co-chair of the Transportation Research Board’s Pedestrians Committee (ANF10) and the Bicycle and Pedestrian Data Subcommittee (ABJ 35(3)) and a member of Traffic Signal Systems committee. Dr. Kothuri received her BCE from Osmania University, India, MSCE from Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge and Ph.D. from Portland State University.

Nathan McNeil, Portland State University

Nathan McNeil is a Research Associate at Portland State University's Center for Urban Studies. He researches the impacts of active transportation and transit equity, on new bicycle infrastructure and programs on travel behavior and attitudes towards cycling, on shared-use mobility programs including carsharing and bike-share, and on the connection between land-use and transportation. He was Co-Principal Investigator on recent national studies of bike share equity (Breaking Barrier to Bike Share and National Scan of Bike Share Equity Programs) and of protected bike lane implementations (Lessons from the Green Lanes). Nathan received a master of urban and regional planning from Portland State University (PSU) and studied history at Columbia University as an undergraduate. Before PSU, Nathan worked for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority in New York City as a performance auditor where he evaluated capital programs and contractors.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

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

ADD IT TO YOUR CALENDAR

Portland State University's Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) is a multidisciplinary hub for all things transportation. We are home to the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), the data programs PORTAL and BikePed Portal, the Better Block PSU program, and PSU's membership in PacTrans, the Pacific Northwest Transportation Consortium. Our continuing goal is to produce impactful research and tools for transportation decision makers, expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engage students and professionals through education, seminars, and participation in research. To get updates about what's happening at TREC, sign up for our monthly newsletter or follow us on social media. 

LOCATION
Vanport Building, Room 269. Address: 1810 SW 5th Ave, Portland, OR 97201
CREDIT
PDH: 1 | AICP: 1
Is Visiting Scholar
Off
DATE
-

Many states, including Oregon, are adopting the Safe System approach to improve traffic safety. One key element of this approach is safer speeds. To help make Oregon's road safer for everyone, Portland State University (PSU) is launching a new study, funded by the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT), to improve safety at intersections using traffic signals.

The project is led by Sirisha Kothuri of Portland State's civil and environmental engineering department, with Patrick Singleton of Utah State University.

It is generally accepted that automobile speeds play a key role in safety: The faster a car is traveling, the greater the risk of severe injury to vulnerable road users in a collision (especially people who are walking or bicycling). Most pedestrian crashes occur on higher-speed, multi-lane arterials.

To manage speed in the urban environment, one emerging strategy is to use traffic signals. Traditional traffic signal timing strategies have prioritized vehicle travel at the expense of other users such as pedestrians, and do not directly account for the safety of road users.

Traffic signal control strategies to improve the pedestrian experience (including safety) exist, but few have been evaluated for their effectiveness. Strategies include reducing cycle lengths, adjusting signal timing based on traffic volumes, time of day schedule changes, and resting on red (where the light stays red for longer at intersections with high pedestrian traffic, so that cars must come to a complete stop before proceeding through the intersection). This study proposes to evaluate the effectiveness of traffic signal control strategies for speed management at multiple Oregon intersections.

The team will collect and analyze data on how different signal strategies affect safety and operations, both on a short-term and longer-term basis. The primary research objectives are to:

  • Evaluate the effectiveness of traffic signal control strategies for speed management on safety-related and operational indicators at multiple Oregon intersections,
  • Develop guidance for agencies on the use of traffic signals to manage speeds.

Once the researchers have produced guidance based on their findings, ODOT and other agencies will be able to use this guidance to determine the most effective signal strategies to use at various types of intersections, to ensure safe speeds and efficient travel for all road users. 

The research stands to advance safety for people walking, driving, rolling or bicycling through signalized intersections.

Photo by Eugene Bartolome/iStock

Portland State University's Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) is a multidisciplinary hub for all things transportation. We are home to the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), the data programs PORTAL and BikePed Portal, the Better Block PSU program, and PSU's membership in PacTrans, the Pacific Northwest Transportation Consortium. Our continuing goal is to produce impactful research and tools for transportation decision makers, expand the diversity and capacity of the workforce, and engage students and professionals through education, seminars, and participation in research. To get updates about what's happening at TREC, sign up for our monthly newsletter or follow us on social media. 

Researchers
skothuri@pdx.edu

Tags

The Better Block PSU program at Portland State University (PSU) has opened our annual call for community organizations to reimagine their streets and underused public spaces in a way to bring people together and reclaim it for their community’s future. 

A partnership between the public spaces advocacy nonprofit Better Block PDX and the Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) at PSU, students in the Better Block PSU program have developed plans and designs for many community-driven projects that promote equitable placemaking, community building, and active transportation–including the well-known Better Naito project. What began as a PSU student-led initiative for safer and higher capacity bicycle and pedestrian facilities along the Waterfront Park, has gained so much public support that it was permanently implemented by the City of Portland.

Integrated into PSU planning and engineering classes, these projects can be powerful demonstrations of community-led ideas.

Do you have an idea for a project that could help activate space for your community? Submit your proposals by March 10, 2025. Selected projects are eligible for grant funding up to $1,000. You can find the application and more information on the Better Block PSU webpage.

Portland State University's Transportation Research and Education Center (TREC) is a multidisciplinary hub for all things transportation. We are home to the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), the data programs PORTAL and BikePed Portal, the Better Block PSU program, and PSU's membership in PacTrans, the Pacific Northwest Transportation Consortium.

Better Block PDX is a local non profit dedicated to reimagining public spaces using temporary traffic control. Collaborating on the Better Block PSU program, we bring together community groups, public officials, and PSU students to test out new uses of our public right of ways.