Reverse commute (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

A reverse commute is a round trip, regularly taken, from an urban area to a suburban one in the morning, and returning in the evening. It is almost universally applied to trips to work in the suburbs from homes in the city. This is in opposition to the regular commute, where a person lives in the suburbs and travels to work in the city.

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract A reverse commute is a round trip, regularly taken, from an urban area to a suburban one in the morning, and returning in the evening. It is almost universally applied to trips to work in the suburbs from homes in the city. This is in opposition to the regular commute, where a person lives in the suburbs and travels to work in the city. The reverse commuter travels in the opposite direction of the regular daily traffic flow during rush hour, and therefore encounters less road traffic congestion faced by regular commuters. An advantage of this system is the usage of otherwise empty transit capacity: no additional trains or travel lanes are necessary to accommodate people riding or driving from downtown to the outskirts in the morning, and likewise back downtown at night. Train and bus routes may be more sparse in the reverse direction, but the vehicles have to get back somehow for their next journey in most cases. However, track capacity on some railroads (for example, the Long Island Rail Road in the suburbs of New York City) significantly reduces or even eliminates reverse commute options. Hence, transit usage can be lower for reverse-commuters than regular commuters. In some cases, reverse commuting has become quite popular. For example, Metro-North Railroad runs rush hour New Haven Line trains from New York City to Stamford, CT and surrounding suburbs to accommodate its many reverse commuters. Low unemployment rates in the suburbs may help to fuel the increase over the past years in reverse commuter ridership. However, the very reasons commuting makes sense (such as higher employment in the city and lower housing prices in the suburbs) operate against the reverse commuter, so people doing so are less common compared to those going the other way. However, these traditional schools of thought are changing, especially in Southern and Western US cities, where employment options tend to follow a more decentralized or polycentric model than Midwest or Eastern US cities. For instance, on the Santa Monica Freeway in Los Angeles, there are more vehicles in the morning peak hour heading westbound towards Santa Monica than into Downtown Los Angeles. An example of reverse commuting can be found in the Washington Metropolitan Area. Due to a combination of ample transit infrastructure and the height limit in downtown, employment options in the area follow a polycentric model, heavily focused in both Downtown and areas such as Arlington, Tysons, Bethesda, and Silver Spring. Companies desiring space in Washington often opt for space in Maryland or Virginia because of the great expense of office space downtown. As such, there are many people who live in Washington and work in Maryland and Virginia, either driving, taking Metrobus, Metrorail, or carpooling. A significant amount of reverse commuting occurs in the San Francisco Bay Area, where many workers live in San Francisco and work in job centers in Silicon Valley such as Palo Alto, Mountain View, and Cupertino. As of 2013, ridership on Caltrain during peak hours consisted of about 60% traditional commuters and 40% reverse commuters. (en)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/2008-08-29_Central_Park_West_in_RTP.jpg?width=300
dbo:wikiPageID 11873248 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 5810 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1082949806 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Caltrain dbr:San_Francisco dbr:San_Francisco_Bay_Area dbr:Santa_Monica,_California dbr:Santa_Monica_Freeway dbr:Bethesda,_Maryland dbc:Urbanization dbc:Transportation_planning dbr:Commuting dbr:Mountain_View,_California dbr:Long_Island_Rail_Road dbr:Los_Angeles dbr:Silicon_Valley dbr:Silver_Spring,_Maryland dbr:Stamford,_Connecticut dbr:Suburb dbr:Metropolitan_area dbr:Urban_area dbr:Traffic_flow dbr:Tysons,_Virginia dbr:Washington_Metro dbr:Cupertino,_California dbr:Downtown_(Washington,_D.C.) dbr:Downtown_Los_Angeles dbr:Palo_Alto,_California dbr:Carpooling dbr:Traffic_congestion dbr:Arlington_County,_Virginia dbr:Heights_of_Buildings_Act_of_1910 dbc:Commuting dbr:Metro-North_Railroad dbr:Metrobus_(Washington,_D.C.) dbr:New_Haven_Line dbr:New_York_City dbr:Rush_hour dbr:Washington_Metropolitan_Area dbr:File:2008-08-29_Central_Park_West_in_RTP.jpg
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Citation_needed dbt:Globalize dbt:Reflist dbt:RefImprove
dct:subject dbc:Urbanization dbc:Transportation_planning dbc:Commuting
gold:hypernym dbr:Trip
rdf:type dbo:Film
rdfs:comment A reverse commute is a round trip, regularly taken, from an urban area to a suburban one in the morning, and returning in the evening. It is almost universally applied to trips to work in the suburbs from homes in the city. This is in opposition to the regular commute, where a person lives in the suburbs and travels to work in the city. (en)
rdfs:label Reverse commute (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Reverse commute wikidata:Reverse commute https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4tv6V
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Reverse_commute?oldid=1082949806&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/2008-08-29_Central_Park_West_in_RTP.jpg
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Reverse_commute
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Reverse-commute dbr:Reverse_commuter dbr:Reverse_commuting dbr:Reverse_peak
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Proposed_expansion_of_the_Buffalo_Metro_Rail dbr:Quincy_Adams_station dbr:List_of_former_Metro_Express_routes dbr:Plymouth_Metrolink dbr:Bay_Street_Emeryville dbr:Dedham_Corporate_Center_station dbr:List_of_transit_routes_in_Minneapolis–Saint_Paul dbr:Richmond_Ferry_Terminal dbr:Riverside_Line dbr:Cycling_in_Chicago dbr:E-tran dbr:Meadowvale_GO_Station dbr:GRTA_Xpress dbr:Mishawum_station dbr:Antelope_Valley_Line dbr:Lechmere_Warehouse_station dbr:Lowell_Line dbr:MARC_Train dbr:Main_Line_(Long_Island_Rail_Road) dbr:Stamford_Transportation_Center dbr:Urban_sprawl dbr:Bussum dbr:Washington_State_Route_520 dbr:West_Falls_Church_station dbr:List_of_AC_Transit_routes dbr:52nd_Street_station_(SEPTA_Regional_Rail) dbr:East_Side_Access dbr:Georgia_Department_of_Corrections dbr:History_of_rail_in_Dedham,_Massachusetts dbr:Harlem_Line dbr:Harlem–125th_Street_station dbr:Harrisburg,_Pennsylvania dbr:Sounder_commuter_rail dbr:Southwest_Ohio_Regional_Transit_Authority dbr:Spatial_mismatch dbr:Metra dbr:Milwaukee_District_North_Line dbr:Redondo_Beach_via_Playa_del_Rey_Line dbr:Transportation_in_the_Sacramento_metropolitan_area dbr:Reverse-commute dbr:Reverse_commuter dbr:Reverse_commuting dbr:Reverse_peak
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Reverse_commute