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Travel and Environmental Implications of School Siting

Study evaluates the relationship between school location, travel choices and the environment

Travel and Environmental Implications of School Siting

Read the Publication (PDF) (22 pp, 1.3 MB, about PDF)

"Travel and Environmental Implications of School Siting," released by the EPA on October 8, 2003, is the first study to empirically examine the relationship between school locations, the built environment around schools, how kids get to school, and the impact on air emissions of those travel choices. Over the next few decades, communities making decisions about the construction and renovation of thousands of schools will be challenged to meet multiple goals -- educational, fiscal, and environmental.

The study finds that:

For some time, there has been a trend toward construction of big schools and requirements for large sites. Guidelines, recommendations, and standards that encourage or require building large schools on new campuses or discourage renovation are embedded in a variety of state and local regulations, laws and funding formulas. This study provides important information about the effect of school location on how children get to school. It shows that school siting and design can affect choices of walking, biking, or driving. In turn, these changes in travel choices could affect traffic congestion, air pollution, and school transportation budgets.

To request copies of this report, call EPA's National Service Center for Environmental Publications at (800) 490-9198 or email nscep@bps-lmit.com and ask for publication number EPA 231-R-03-004.

Read the report online (PDF) (22 pp, 1.3 MB, about PDF)

 

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