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Commuting Patterns in Indiana: A GIS Approach. March 13 th , 2007 by Indraneel Kumar, AICP; Spatial and GIS Analyst Christine Nolan, Senior Associate Purdue Center for Regional Development Purdue University.
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Commuting Patterns in Indiana: A GIS Approach March 13th, 2007 by Indraneel Kumar, AICP; Spatial and GIS Analyst Christine Nolan, Senior Associate Purdue Center for Regional Development Purdue University Acknowledgements: Eda Unal, Graduate Research Assistant, Purdue Center for Regional Development, Purdue University
What is Commuting? • Movement / travel for a “trip” purpose • Work purpose- “Place of Work” and “Place of Residence” • Trip purpose could be shopping, school, recreational, social, etc. • Each trip has an “origin” and “destination” • A trip could be “unlinked” or “linked”
Parameters • Purpose • Travel time- peak/non-peak • Travel mode • Drove alone vs. • car/van pooling Source: FHWA, FTA, DOT
At a Glance • Nationally, average travel time for commuting to job (workers 16 years and over) was 26 minutes in 2000 • In 1990, 22 minutes • About 76 % workers (who did not work at home) drove alone in 2000 • In 1990, 73% Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Decennial Census
At a Glance • Based on American Community Survey • In 2005, average travel time for commuting to job is 25.1 minutes • About 77% workers (who did not work at home) drove alone to work • Nationwide Personal Transportation Survey (NPTS), 1995 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Transportation Statistics
Data Characteristics • Census Transportation Planning Package, 2000 • Available from Federal Highway Administration, U.S. DOT • Bureau of Transportation Statistics, Transtats • Based on Census 2000 Long Form Questionnaire • 1 in 6 households in the U.S. covered by the survey • Various data products- Place of Residence, Place of Work, Journey to Work Flow Tables • County-County Worker Flows
County-County Worker Flows • Place of Residence and Place of Work Counties • Commuter Flow methodology by FHWA • Available at http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/ctpp • Data available at http://www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/commuting.html • Select the whole State (Indiana) • ---- Residence County ---- Work County
County-County Worker Flows • Converting the Excel file into “line feature class” • - Convert County Boundary into Center-Point feature class • Excel into DBF IV • Join center-point table to DBF to populate coordinates • Join Indiana counties as residence and then as workplace • Each pair of Indiana counties has two entries • Convert the DBF IV into “flow line” • Query and refine Tools Used: ET Geo Wizards, ArcGIS Toolbox
Join by using Res_StCo (Residence State and counties) to populate the Indiana counties • If Indiana counties are residence- they are populated (2,555 out of 5,239 records in total) • Fill in X and Y Coordinates • Export as Indiana Residence Counties (DBF) file • Join by using Wrk_StCo (Work State and counties) to populate the Indiana counties • All work counties are Indiana counties- each record is populated (5,239 records in total) • Fill in X and Y Coordinates • Export as Indiana Work Counties (DBF) file Process
Add Indiana Residence Counties (DBF) and Indiana Work Counties (DBF) as Event Themes • County center points outside of Indiana will come the origin (0,0) • Put Spatial Reference- projection system Process Origin (0,0)
Merge the Two Event Themes by using “Merge Function” in ArcGIS Toolbox • Since “fields names” for both the themes are constant, this results into 10,478 records or two tables are merged into one “feature class” • Each unique id. (Residence State-Residence County-Work State- Work County) will be repeated twice, only X and Y coordinates will change • If Residence and Work Counties are same- X and Y coordinates remain the same • ET Geo Wizards “Point to Polyline” • A flow-line is created between each Residence-Work County pairs (5,239 lines) • Commuters coming from Residence County outside of state receives origin (0,0) coordinate as one end • Populate commuter count data by joining the tables Process
Within County and County to County Journey to Work (JTW) Process
Inferences • Generally, small dots represent bedroom communities and large dots are major employment centers (Marion County) • Flow direction is from small dots to large dots • Reverse flow is small and hidden beneath the larger flow • small dots connected to other small dots represent rural regions • Forms of major metropolitan areas emerge by using the Flow Maps
Counties • Queries at a county level is possible
Lake County as Residence-origin • Lake County as Work-destination
Further Explorations? • Integrate other transportation variables • Means of Transportation • Travel Time • Lower Geographies- Traffic Analysis Zones (TAZs) • Interactive GIS Database • Other Methods of Flow Mapping • Movement of Goods • Exploring Tobler’s Flow Mapper
Further Explorations? • Tobler’s Flow Mapper • Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science (CSISS), University of California, Santa Barbara • Movement Mapping- Migration, Flow of $, Journal Citations Source: Prof. Waldo Tobler
Thank you! Indraneel Kumar Purdue Center for Regional Development Purdue University 1201 W. State Street West Lafayette, IN 47907-2057 Office: 765-494-PCRD (7273) Toll Free: 877-882-PCRD (7273) Fax: 765-494-9870 email: PCRDinfo@purdue.edu Tel: 765-494-9485 email: ikumar@purdue.edu