Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Department of Urban Studies and Planning


11.188: Urban Planning and Social Science Laboratory

Project Titles and Abstracts - Spring 2018


MONDAY PRESENTATIONS (May 14, Room 9-255, 2:30-5:00 PM)


Name Title Abstract
1 Fiona Tanuwidjaja Understanding the Impact of Road Infrastructure on Cycling Accident Rates and Severity in Seattle In 2017, a city-sponsored count of motor vehicles in Seattle showed a similar count to the year prior, in 2016. As Seattle is one of the largest growing cities in the United States (adding 20,000 new residents since 2016), this may be a sign that residents are moving to other methods of transport—such as public or active transit. Unfortunately, another city-sponsored report showed a 20% increase in road and active transit accidents in 2016, of which several of them were considered serious injuries.

This project aims to answer the following questions: 1) What areas of Seattle have large shares of pedestrian and cyclist accidents? 2) What proportion of these accidents included serious injuries? And 3) What is the link between existing road and cycling infrastructure (i.e. sharrows and dedicated bike lanes) on the accident rates?

This analysis uses data from Seattle’s Open Data project. I will be analyzing a shapefile with up-to-date collision data including location, severity, number of parties involved, and method of transport (i.e. bike, pedestrian, and car). In particular, I am interested in car-bike, bike-bike, and bike-pedestrian collisions. I will then overlay a shapefile with Seattle’s existing road infrastructure elements to determine if accidents have occurred in greater proportion in areas with certain types of cycling infrastructure. To determine if routes are heavily congested (used to estimate the relative accident rate), I will incorporate data on commercial vs. residential areas and time-of-day of accidents. I will use Stata to clean the data and create new variables for the analysis (ex. an index of route congestion, an index of accident severity, and categorical values of time of day). I will also use ArcGIS’s intersect tool to merge the collision data to road infrastructure type. While this analysis is hardly completed as of now, I can already see that commercial areas have a larger proportion of serious accidents and that areas with dedicated bike lanes have relatively few accidents.

2 Lexi Sack
Spatial Risks for Presentation and Death 

For Turtles Presenting for Vehicular Trauma at a NC Wildlife Clinic, 2005-2014

North Carolina State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine’s Turtle Rescue Team (TRT) is a wildlife clinic that treats wild reptiles and amphibians. Between 2005-2014, TRT treated 1,847 patients of which 80% had incident locations that could be geocoded. Of these, 935 turtles presented for vehicular trauma. Over 75% of these presented from within a thirty-mile radius of TRT. Spatial patterns were examined with data from NCDOT, NC One Map, and USGS.Distance to protected lands.  Waterways were buffered by 800m and roads by 100m based off turtles’ nesting habits and home ranges. Getis-Ord Gi statistic was used to examine hot spot density and logistic regression as used to analyze species and outcome.Most turtles were found in developed areas. There were significantly higher incidences in specific locations near TRT and to the southwest. Some surrounded major road intersections. Outcomes did not depend on road type or other spatial factors. However, compared to other turtles presenting for vehicular trauma, Eastern box turtles (Terrapene carolina carolina) were 2.2 times more likely to be found adjacent to protected areas, and yellow-bellied sliders (Trachemys scripta scripta) were 4.6 times more likely to be adjacent to protected areas and water. The risk of vehicular mortality thus needs to be considered for future development around these protected areas, as well as for the potential for mitigation. However, mitigation actions need to not only be focused on highways but on all road types.

3 Noah McDaniel Exploring the Food Desert

Visualizing equity and food access in the Cambridge area

Some have referred to the MIT area as a food desert. With the closest major grocery store nearly a twenty minute walk from the center of campus, access to fresh and healthy food can be challenging. This project explores food access and equity in the five-city area around Cambridge, including Arlington, Belmont, Somerville, and Watertown. The maps were developed using travel time data for transit, car, and walking modes from the Google Directions and Google Place APIs. Data on population and income levels for block groups were taken from the American Community Survey (ACS). Each map displays a choropleth of travel time from each block group to the nearest major supermarket, points highlighting major and minor food distributors, and block groups satisfying a criteria of particularly low food access and high poverty. Initial results suggest that access to food can differ significantly depending on travel mode choice, and that block groups with lower median income are more likely to have less access to supermarkets.

4 Misael Galdamez In Search of Mexcellence: A Spatial Analysis of Taco and Burrito Joints Across the U.S. Every Californian’s worst nightmare is moving states. But even worse is moving and being starved of quality Mexican food. Using a dataset from Datafiniti’s Business Database, I look at the spatial distribution of restaurants that sell tacos and burritos across the United States. Where is the greatest concentrations of these restaurants, and how does their distribution relate to the size of their Hispanic population of Mexican origin? What other spatial patterns can be found?

 

Note: This presentation is not an endorsement of any particular state’s Mexican food.


5 Rohan Shah

6 Adriana Jacobsen MBTA Bus Subsidizations and their Relation to Route Demographics The MBTA runs over 170 buses through Greater Boston, which have significant variation in their ridership, length, reliability, and overcrowding. However, a performance measurement that is less visible to the average commuter is how much it costs the MBTA to run the route per passenger—i.e., how much each passenger’s trip is subsidized. As it turns out, these costs vary wildly, ranging from less than a dollar to almost ten dollars spent per rider. Using data from the CTPS Systemwide Passenger Survey, the MBTA Route Performance Indicators document, and ACS data, this project delves into the demographic patterns of the most efficient and inefficient bus routes. The unfortunate result is that the most inefficient and costly routes that the MBTA is running tend to service communities that are majority high-income, white, and car-owners. To conclude, the project will touch on some possible solutions to the transit gaps in Boston, and demonstrate how certain service improvements could change the commutes of many Greater Boston residents.
 
7 Avital Baral An Analysis of Public Transit Accessibility in Seattle For my final project, I am analyzing public transit accessibility in the city of Seattle.

Specifically, I will be looking at how proximity to public transit correlates to median household income, and high density of asian-americans and african-americans (the main racial minority groups in Seattle), respectively.

The data for this project primarily comes from Seattle open GIS website and the King County open GIS website, which provide GIS information for free. I will be presenting the demographic information in the form of 3 thematic maps: one for median household income, one for percentage of Asian-Americans, and one for percentage of African-Americans.

To evaluate proximity to public transit, I am currently experimenting with a couple of different approaches. The first one is making Thiessen Polygons around public transit stops,which group together areas which have the same closest point in the point layer (which in this case is a point layer of all of the public transit stops). The second one is creating a raster of the Seattle city area, with small grid cell size. Then, I will map each grid cell with its distance from a transit stop point.

While I do not have full results yet, I believe that lower-income neighborhoods and neighborhoods with high density of African-Americans will have lower public transit accessibility. However, I do not have a prediction for what the results will be for neighborhoods with a high density of Asian-Americans in Seattle. Historically, that community suffered from discrimination and redlining into poorer/less desirable neighborhoods. However, nowadays, Asian-Americans in Seattle have a high median income, which I predict correlates to better transit availability.

8 Kathleen Schwind Water Shortages in California

The increasing scarcity of freshwater around the world is one of our most pressing issues. Highly populated areas are often threatened by water shortages, and this trend will only increase in coming decades. This is especially true of California. Population increases, freshwater consumption for residents, agriculture, and industry increases, and rainfall decreases. The question that many policy makers and California residents ask is: Just how bad is this situation? My final project will seek to provide an answer.

 

Key themes: population growth, freshwater scarcity/demand, climate change


WEDNESDAY PRESENTATIONS (May 16, Room 9-255, 2:00-3:15 PM)


Name
Title
Abstract
1 Stephanie Nunez Dominguez Exploring the Relationship Between MIT Development Projects and Cambridge Housing MIT has recently taken on many development projects (Kendall Square Initiative, University Park Expansion, 181 Mass. Ave, Volpe Site, etc.) to expand its campus and to help redevelop and “enrich” the surrounding Cambridge area. This project aims to explore how MIT’s major development projects and general presence in Cambridge relate to social and economic issues. I hope to analyze the correlation between housing trends (homeownership rates, housing costs, relative price of estates, contract rent, student housing rates, etc.) and proximity to MIT before and after major development projects started. I will use US Census data to create thematic maps of the area around MIT to quantitatively analyze said correlation. I also want to take a qualitative look at the impact of these development projects by visiting the areas around these sites and looking into local responses to these projects.

In exploring these relationships I hope to answer the following questions: What are current housing trends in the areas right outside MIT? How have those trends changed since 2000? How does MIT’s own shortage of both undergraduate and graduate housing relate to housing trends in the area?

I also want to pose some broader questions: To what extent is MIT responsible for supporting the growth of Cambridge and the Boston Metropolitan area? Are MIT’s values (particularly those values related to MIT OneWorld) reflected in their actions here in Cambridge? Is MIT overlooking issues closer to home (student housing, failing infrastructure) in attempting to achieve their goals and values?

2 Andreina Seijas

Mapping Night-Time Boston: Analyzing the Potential of Expanding the City's Hours of Operation

Despite its vast student population and a growing restaurant scene, Boston is known as a “sleepy town” where services and amenities become highly restricted after dark. The city places a strict quota on the number of alcohol licenses available, and its public transportation network shuts down after 12:30 am. As a result, Boston is lagging behind other U.S. cities like New York and Washington D.C. that are looking for ways to expand their night-time economies as a means to create new jobs, promote tourism and enhance quality of life.

 

The goal of this project is to explore the spatial dynamics of night-time regulations in Boston as a means to understand the potential of expanding the city’s nocturnal activity. To do so, it will perform a suitability analysis to determine the best location(s) for a pilot expansion of liquor license hours (currently capped at 1:30 am) based on criteria such as: zoning, safety, access to public transport and the existing number of liquor licenses.

 

This project is part of my doctoral research at the Graduate School of Design which looks at how cities can create safer, more inclusive and productive spaces after dark.
 
3 Elise Bickford

4 Kevin Li How Metropolitan Statistical Area Boundaries Deviate from Settlement Patterns Many regional or metropolitan level statistics are done using the Metropolitan Statistical Area, a set of boundaries defined by the Office of Management and Budget based on county boundaries. However, as county boundaries are seldom updated, and often predate human settlement, particularly in the West, Metropolitan Statistical Area boundaries often can differ from settlement patterns considerably. This project explores places where this is especially egregious, such as the Inland Empire and Salt Lake City. I try clustering census blocks based on residential density, and explore the relationship between these clusters and commuting data from the American Community Survey.

5 Morgan Augillard Where are the Students? Where are the dollars? A Look into New Orleans Metro School Populations and Funding Using financial data from the Louisiana Department of Education, this project will examine school population change over time in the New Orleans metro area (7 parishes: Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, St. John, St. Tammy, St. Charles, and St. Bernard). The time periods selected reflect the years immediately before and after Hurricane Katrina, as well as the most recent fiscal year reporting (2015-2016). The Katrina period was selected to begin examining the way school enrollment was affected, and see the ways dollars have shifted away from district schools to make way for charters. This project will attempt to draw correlations between the shifts in population, and the shifts in dollars spent in schools within each parish.

6 Ye Rin Chu Agricultural staple food production in the U.S.: observing 10 year changes between 2002 and 2012 By 2007, US produced about $330 billion worth of agricultural commodities every year (2007 Census of Agriculture). With the increased frequency of extreme weather, temperature, and precipitation, how has food production changed over the years? This project investigates 10 year agricultural crop yield changes in the US at county levels, between 2002 and 2012, for corn, wheat, soybeans, and lentils. These are the four most consumed staple crops in the world. Decreased production of these crops has implications for both the world food price and global consumption. The project probes whether the volume of production has increased (or decreased) for each crop and also whether the acres of land devoted to agricultural activities have changed over the years. The results are displayed in thematic maps. Overlays of precipitation and temperature changes in California and the Great Plains facilitate examination of any correlation with the production changes of the four crops. The main data source of the project is USDA Agricultural Statistics Service and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

 


Last modified: May 8, 2018 by ldelgado
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