Despite empirical evidence, the common approaches for destination choice modeling do not usually account for an overall travel time budget. In fact, if congestion worsens workers will choose different workplaces instantaneously, a highly unrealistic representation of observed work trip destination choice. The objective of this paper is to incorporate travel time budgets as constraints for non-commute trips in the destination choice model, while the commute time will be given directly by home and workplace locations as defined in a synthetic population. Individual travel time budgets for every trip purpose were calculated using the household as analysis unit. The results indicate that travel time depends on the number of required trips by trip purpose and household sociodemographics. Increasing the number of trips for one purpose reduces the travel time allocated for the other trips, confirming the existence of an overall travel time budget. Household size is the most important sociodemographic variable, followed by the household income. Destination choice modeling with travel time budgets as constraint will add fidelity to trip-based travel demand models.
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Despite empirical evidence, the common approaches for destination choice modeling do not usually account for an overall travel time budget. In fact, if congestion worsens workers will choose different workplaces instantaneously, a highly unrealistic representation of observed work trip destination choice. The objective of this paper is to incorporate travel time budgets as constraints for non-commute trips in the destination choice model, while the commute time will be given directly by home and...
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