Exploring the Relationship between Big-Box Retail and Consumer Travel Demand in the Greater Toronto Area
Authors
Ron N Buliung
University of Toronto
Tony Hernandez
Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity
Joshua E Mitchell
Masters of Spatial Analysis, Ryerson University
Keywords:
consumer travel behaviour, power retail, big-box stores
Abstract
Canada’s retail landscape has been structurally transformed by the widespread development of large format (big-box) retail since the mid-1990s. Emphasis placed on convenience, price, and auto-based accessibility, coupled with design elements of big-box agglomerations has produced new modes of consumer retail interaction. In view of these recent changes, it is surprising that little effort has been extended to studying the transportation impacts of big-box retail. This paper explores the relationship between consumer travel behaviour and the expansion of large format retail facilities within Canada’s largest metropolitan region, the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). Data have been drawn from the 1996 and 2001 Transportation Tomorrow Surveys (TTS) and combined with a longitudinal retail structural database. Regional travel flows and “big-box” case studies suggest considerable auto-dependence for shopping activities, particularly in the suburban cities of the GTA. Rising retail capacity at case study locations appears to have been matched by a dramatic increase in auto-based shopping travel. Evidence from this research points to a potential gap between consumer activities and the prevailing sustainability objectives of transport and land use policy initiatives.
Author Biographies
Ron N Buliung, University of Toronto
Assistant Professor
Department of Geography
University of Toronto at Mississauga
Tony Hernandez, Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity
Director
Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity
Ryerson University
Joshua E Mitchell, Masters of Spatial Analysis, Ryerson University
Graduate Student
Masters of Spatial Analysis
Ryerson University