Projects
Principal Investigator:
Antara MurshedFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
New Mobility, Public Transit, Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Erik FelixFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Public Transit, Transportation & Communities, Transportation & HealthThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Kimberly VenegasFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Transportation & Communities, Transportation & HealthThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Paavo MonkkonenFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Transportation & CommunitiesLos Angeles County has spent tens of billions of dollars to build over 100 miles of rail transit, but today per capita transit ridership is 40 percent lower than before rail construction began. One reason for this startling failure is that LA remains overwhelmingly laid out for the automobile: it is a low-density, parking-heavy landscape where the built environment is not conducive to transit use. Our analysis will compare costs, project timelines, and community benefits of by-right and nearby discretionary projects. We will estimate reductions in project costs and time to market resulting from by-right approvals and compare benefits by assessing differences in affordable units provided by developers. This analysis will be used to project impacts to housing affordability and availability near transit, with estimated mobility impacts that could result, including changes to transit usage and vehicle-miles traveled.
Principal Investigator:
Madeline BrozenFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Access to Opportunities, Transportation & CommunitiesA recent survey by the Public Policy Institute of California shows that 85% of Californians are concerned about the presence of homeless people in their community and believe addressing this issue should be a top priority. Few scholars have studied the large and growing numbers of people who live in their vehicles. According to point-in-time count data from the 2019 Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, over 40% of the unsheltered homeless population in LA County, some 14,000 people, rely on vehicles (cars, vans, RVs) for shelter. The increase in vehicular homelessness raises challenges for both people who are experiencing homelessness and for cities. Vehicle living can be cost-effective relative to sky-high rents, but residents often lack essential amenities. At the same time, residents complain about the adverse effects of vehicle encampments on their neighborhoods. In response, this project seeks to create a better understanding of vehicular homelessness as a way for both homeless providers and transportation officials alike to address this precarious form of shelter.
Principal Investigator:
Adam Millard-BallFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Transportation & Communities, Transportation & HealthThe racist legacy of freeways has come into stark focus in the past year. This research focuses on one specific impact of freeways: neighborhood severance. Freeways disrupt the neighborhood street grid, creating particular hardships for pedestrians who must take circuitous routes to access transit and to walk to stores, schools, and other destinations. The impacts of disconnected streets on walking and public health are well documented (e.g. Handy 2003; Marshall et al. 2014; Barrington-Leigh and Millard-Ball 2019). But the environmental justice dimension of connectivity has remained unexplored, as has the link between most academic studies of street connectivity and local planning efforts. The research team will test the hypothesis that, while freeways disrupt street networks everywhere, the severance effects are greatest in BIPOC communities. This injustice might arise if White residents have more political voice to advocate for a denser mesh of local streets that cross the freeway, or to cancel a freeway proposal altogether.
Principal Investigator:
Bryan GravelineFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Samikchhya BhusalFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Access to Opportunities, Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Anastasia Loukaitou-SiderisFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Public Transit, Transportation & CommunitiesMore than half a million individuals experience homelessness every night in the U.S. With the scale of the crisis often surpassing the capacities of existing safety nets — all the more so since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic — many turn to transit vehicles, stops, and stations for shelter. Many also use transit to reach destinations such as workplaces, shelters, and community service centers. This project investigates the intersections of the pandemic, transit, and homelessness; the scale of homelessness on transit; and how transit agencies are responding to the problem. All told, centering the mobility and wellbeing of unhoused riders fits within transit’s social service role and is important to improving outcomes for them and for all riders.
Principal Investigator:
Madeleine GarcesFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Traffic, Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Jan YonanFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Traffic, Transportation & CommunitiesThe Covid-19 pandemic has forced a series of social distancing measures upon Angelenos and prevented public access to many traditionally community spaces. Fears of infection have disincentivized many from public transit, severely limiting the mobility of those without cars. This project will look to see how closure of local streets may substitute public recreational space and promote active transportation. My project will analyze the current “Slow Streets” program by the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, which attempts to slow local traffic in select streets to create recreational opportunities in the city. I look to analyze the effects of Slow Streets in two capacities – public perception and mobility impact.
Principal Investigator:
Adam Millard-BallFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Transportation & CommunitiesStreet rights-of-way are typically a city’s most valuable asset. Streets serve numerous functions — access, movement, and the provision of space for on-street parking, children’s play, and social interaction. But the more land that is devoted to streets, the less land there is available for housing, parks, offices, and other land uses. In this research project, UCLA researchers quantified the width of streets in 20 of the largest counties in the United States, and the value of the land under those streets. This research found that streets in the U.S. are much wider than in other countries. Street widths are normally dictated by subdivision codes and local street design manuals. The highest street land values are found in coastal California, and streets could be much narrower.
Principal Investigator:
Lena RogowFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Traffic, Transportation & CommunitiesIn response to the increasing need to socially distance on the streets, many cities nationwide — and especially in California — have installed Slow Streets that prohibit thru traffic on roads. However, because Slow Streets are new, few cities have extensive data about resident responses to these new walkways. SFMTA has issued a questionnaire to better understand resident attitudes and understandings of Slow Streets. This project will perform a qualitative and quantitative analysis to provide insight into the responses from San Francisco residents.
Principal Investigator:
Jayne VidheecharoenFunding Source:
Program Area(s):
Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Jorge CanezFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Access to Opportunities, Transportation & Communities, Transportation & HealthThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Evelyn BlumenbergFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Access to Opportunities, Public Transit, Transportation & CommunitiesPrincipal Investigator:
Madeleine SimsFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Environment, Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Guadalupe HuertaFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Principal Investigator:
Brian D. TaylorFunding Source:
Statewide Transportation Research ProgramProgram Area(s):
Access to Opportunities, Traffic, Transportation & CommunitiesFor decades evaluation of the benefits and costs of new- or re- development in urban areas has centered on the effects of development on nearby traffic flows. Historically, and in most states outside of California, the level-of-service (LOS) scale has been used to approve or disapprove commercial developments. The logic of such an evaluation model is that smooth traffic flows are a primary goal of urban areas, which has the effect of discouraging the sorts of densely developed places that are more easily accessed by foot, bike, shared mobility, and public transit. To overcome the traffic flow focus of traffic impact analyses, the California legislature passed SB 743 in 2013, which mandated a change in the way that transportation impacts are analyzed under CEQA. New CEQA Guidelines were created to replace LOS with a new focus on how proposed developments affect vehicle miles of travel (VMT). This translational project will build on prior research, as well as the burgeoning literature on operationalizing access into transportation planning and engineering to develop and test some new analytical tools to evaluate the access impacts of developments.
Principal Investigator:
Samuel SperoniFunding Source:
Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation CenterProgram Area(s):
Access to Opportunities, Transportation & CommunitiesThis capstone project was completed in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Urban & Regional Planning at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.