The new rankings are part of the Access Across America study, which began in 2013. The rankings focus on accessibility, a measure that examines both land use and transportation systems. Accessibility measures how many destinations, such as jobs, can be reached in a given time.
“Rather than focusing on how congestion affects individual travelers,” explained Andrew Owen, director of the Observatory, “our approach quantifies the overall impact that congestion has on the potential for interaction within urban areas.”
Top 10 metro areas with the greatest loss in job accessibility due to congestion1. Los Angeles2. Boston3. Chicago4. New York5. Phoenix6. Houston7. Riverside8. Seattle9. Pittsburgh10. San Francisco
The study, which is based on data from 2015, also ranks access to jobs by car for the 50 largest U.S. metro areas.
“For example, the Minneapolis–St. Paul metro area ranked 12th in terms of job accessibility but 23rd in the reduction in job access due to congestion,” Owen said. “This suggests that job accessibility is influenced less by congestion here than in other cities.”
Top 10 metro areas with the greatest job accessibility by car1. New York2. Los Angeles3. Chicago4. Dallas5. San Jose6. San Francisco7. Washington, DC8. Houston9. Boston10. Philadelphia
To measure access to jobs by car, researchers calculated travel times using a detailed road network and speed data that reflect typical conditions for an 8 a.m. Wednesday morning departure. Additionally, the accessibility results for 8 a.m. are compared with accessibility results for 4 a.m. to estimate the impact of road and highway congestion on job accessibility.
Rankings are determined by a weighted average of accessibility, with a higher weight given to closer, easier-to-access jobs. Jobs reachable within 10 minutes are weighted most heavily, and jobs are given decreasing weights as travel time increases up to 60 minutes.
The report—Access Across America: Auto 2015—presents detailed accessibility and congestion impact values for each metropolitan area as well as block-level maps that illustrate the spatial patterns of accessibility within each area. It also includes a census tract-level map that shows accessibility patterns at a national scale.
The research was sponsored by the National Accessibility Evaluation Pooled-Fund Study, a multi-year effort led by the Minnesota Department of Transportation and supported by partners including the Federal Highway Administration and 11 state DOTs.
Accessibility Observatory reports, including the new analysis of job accessibility by auto (Access Across America: Auto 2015), are available at access.umn.edu.
The University of Minnesota has a remote ReadyCam® studio available for use on campus. The studio enables experts to appear on live TV at a moments’ notice without traveling to a network studio. Equipped with broadcast lighting, fiber optic and satellite capabilities, and a robotic camera, the studio is remotely controlled by VideoLink professionals who coordinate all aspects of the live shot. If you're interested in taping or hosting an interview with Andrew Owen utilizing the studio, contact Lacey Nygard at [email protected].