CYAILGJun 18, 2025

Transit for All: Mapping Equitable Bike2Subway Connection using Region Representation Learning

arXiv:2506.15113v22 citationsh-index: 3SIGSPATIAL/GIS
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses transit equity gaps for low-income and minority communities in urban areas, representing an incremental improvement through better demand prediction and accessibility metrics.

The paper tackles the problem of equitable public transit access in cities by developing a framework to strategically expand bike-sharing systems into underserved neighborhoods, demonstrating that their approach reduces transit access disparities related to economic and demographic factors in New York City.

Ensuring equitable public transit access remains challenging, particularly in densely populated cities like New York City (NYC), where low-income and minority communities often face limited transit accessibility. Bike-sharing systems (BSS) can bridge these equity gaps by providing affordable first- and last-mile connections. However, strategically expanding BSS into underserved neighborhoods is difficult due to uncertain bike-sharing demand at newly planned ("cold-start") station locations and limitations in traditional accessibility metrics that may overlook realistic bike usage potential. We introduce Transit for All (TFA), a spatial computing framework designed to guide the equitable expansion of BSS through three components: (1) spatially-informed bike-sharing demand prediction at cold-start stations using region representation learning that integrates multimodal geospatial data, (2) comprehensive transit accessibility assessment leveraging our novel weighted Public Transport Accessibility Level (wPTAL) by combining predicted bike-sharing demand with conventional transit accessibility metrics, and (3) strategic recommendations for new bike station placements that consider potential ridership and equity enhancement. Using NYC as a case study, we identify transit accessibility gaps that disproportionately impact low-income and minority communities in historically underserved neighborhoods. Our results show that strategically placing new stations guided by wPTAL notably reduces disparities in transit access related to economic and demographic factors. From our study, we demonstrate that TFA provides practical guidance for urban planners to promote equitable transit and enhance the quality of life in underserved urban communities.

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