Skip to main content Skip to main navigation Skip to page-level navigation Go to the Disability Resource Centre Website Go to the DRC Booking Accommodation Portal Go to the Inclusive Technology Lab Website
The University of British Columbia
The University of British Columbia Okanagan campus
Faculty of Applied ScienceSchool of Engineering
  • Programs & Admissions
    • Civil Engineering (BASc)
    • Computer Engineering (BASc)
    • Electrical Engineering (BASc)
    • Manufacturing Engineering (BASc)
    • Mechanical Engineering (BASc)
    • Graduate Degrees
    • Micro-credentials
    • Transfers
    • Outreach & Community Programs
  • Student Resources
    • Undergraduate Students
    • Graduate Resources
    • Undergraduate Capstone
    • Clubs & Associations
    • Professional Development
    • Student Feedback System
  • Research
    • Advanced Materials & Manufacturing
    • Advanced Systems & Data Analytics
    • Clean Technology & Environmental Systems
    • Health Technologies
    • Urban Infrastructure & Green Construction
    • Research Chairs & Directors
    • Postdoctoral Research Fellow Listings
    • Labs & Facilities
  • About
    • Careers
    • Contact & People
    • School Of Engineering Forms
    • Inclusion
    • Lab & Facility Safety
    • News & Events
    • Strategic Plan & Annual Reports
  • Prospective Students
  • Current Students
  • Faculty and Staff
  • Apply to UBC
    • Undergraduate
    • Graduate
  • Contact & People
  • Donor & Alumni
  • Faculty and Staff
  • Current Students
  • Prospective Students
Home / 2020 / December / 15 / UBC collaborates with other global institutions to track COVID travel patterns

About

Careers
Contact & People
Lab & Facility Safety
School Of Engineering Forms
Strategic Plan & Annual Reports
News & Events

UBC collaborates with other global institutions to track COVID travel patterns

December 15, 2020

UBC researchers at the School of Engineering are working with the University of Auckland and Wayne State University to explore changes to the way we work, study, and travel as a result of COVID.

In a similar study conducted between March and April, the researchers found that out-of-home travel activities were 50% lower than the pre-pandemic period in the Okanagan. Not surprisingly, a significant increase was observed in individuals working and studying from home as a result of government imposed restrictions.

“Building on this study, we are now exploring how these behavioural changes that occurred in short-term, are evolving over the longer-term, and into a post-COVID world,” says Mahmudur Fatmi, an assistant professor and lead researcher at the Centre for Transportation and Land Use Research (CeTLUR). He and collaborators are particularly interested in better understanding public preferences when it comes to working from home or remote learning, and the barriers or benefits that are emerging related to public transit and online shopping.

“There isn’t a person who hasn’t been impacted by COVID in the way their day-to-day activities have envolved since March,” explains Fatmi, “so better understanding those changes is critical to adapting our policies and infrastructure to address them.”

According to Fatmi, that might mean changes to policies such as teleworking, flexible work hours, virtual classes, and transit recovery strategies, or other mechanisms to address how people’s attitudes and lifestyles are adapting to COVID.

By taking into account global changes as well, uniquely Canadian solutions can emerge that incorporate best practices or trends established elsewhere.

“If it turns out that travel behaviours are different from one country to another, we need to investigate why,” Fatmi notes, “Was it a matter of different policies? And did it work or not?”

Fatmi has been collaborating with different research projects across North America and New Zealand since 2015. Most recently, on a project exploring the residential choice decision processes, and cycling demand analysis across continents.

To take part in the travel survey, visit https://cetlur.ok.ubc.ca/surveys/ for more information.

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Civil, COVID, Fatmi, International, Study, Travel

School of Engineering
Faculty of Applied Science
Okanagan Campus
EME4242 - 1137 Alumni Ave
Kelowna, BC Canada V1V 1V7
Find us on
     
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility