Frank Hebbert

MIT, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, graduated September 2008.

Now working at Regional Plan Association, and contributing to opensourceplanning.org.

find me on twitter / flickr / gmail

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MCP thesis: Local travel habits of baby boomers in suburban age-restricted communities

The baby boomer generation is an unprecedented demographic of 78 million Americans, now entering retirement. Living mostly in suburbs and dependent on private vehicles for nearly all travel needs, boomers face increasing mobility challenges as they age. Evidence suggests that walkable and social neighborhoods are important in sustaining independence and good health during later life. Age-restricted communities may offer a social and physical environment that supports an active lifestyle.

I use a travel survey to investigate local activity and sociability in age-restricted communities and unrestricted typical neighborhoods in suburban Boston. I explore three techniques to account for residential self-selection, attempting to isolate the true effect of neighborhood location from personal preferences. Controlling for income, retirement and other factors, residents of restricted communities are more active than residents of typical suburbs, with more people making trips on foot and to visit neighbors. Boomers appear to select age-restricted locations to fulfill latent desires to make trips to neighbors, whereas increased walking in the same communities does not appear to be a result of self-selection.

The association between age-restricted communities and increased activity suggest that these developments have lessons for better suburban environments. How the communities influence activity is not understood: in models, measures of urban form are not significant, though these developments appear to have different layouts from typical neighborhoods. More detailed analysis and additional data collection may provide a clearer assessment of the role of different neighborhood features in influencing boomer travel habits.

Download: Small, low-quality maps (8.7mb); Large, high-quality maps (22.6mb).

processing applets

I took a short class in processing in January 2008. See some of the projects: city skyline, dots. This animated urban growth map was the final project.

greenhouse gas emissions audit

In Spring 2007, I carried out a greenhouse gas emissions audit of DUSP. This quantified carbon dioxide and other gas emissions from buildings, travel, material consumption and waste disposal. The study is available online here.

printing on dusp's printers

What's happening with the DUSP printers? Check out this dynamic chart with total pages printed per day for the last couple of years.

what's eating dusp?

Results and data from the event food survey at the Spring town hall.

student calendar for MIT DUSP events

See the DUSP student-run calendar and event schedule here. You can also subscribe to the calendar in your google cal or other calendar program.

mit mail -> gmail forwarding

Fed up with the MIT webmail service? See these instructions for details of forwarding all email sent to your MIT account to gmail (or any other webmail of your choice).