In this paper we employ Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, a polycentric city with 10 employment subcenters, as a case study to explore the role of employment subcenters in determining residential location decisions. We estimate discrete choice models of residential location decisions: conditional logit models and heteroscedastic logit models with both the full choice set and sampled choices. We ënd that access to certain employment subcenters, measured in terms of generalized cost, is an important determinant of households’ residential location decisions. The proximity to speciëc employment subcenters varies across households with different income levels. These patterns can be explained by existing land use and transportation patterns, as well as by subcenters’ economic specialization.
Abstract:
Publication date:
November 1, 2008
Publication type:
Journal Article
Citation:
Cho, E., Rodriguez, D., & Song, Y. (2008). The Role of Employment Subcenters in Residential Location Decisions. Journal of Transport and Land Use, 1(2), 121–151.