Site icon BikePortland

With $2.8 million grant, PSU now a national center for ‘livable communities’ research

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward


The Oregon Transportation Research and Education Consortium (OTREC) at Portland State University continued to raise its national profile with today’s announcement of a $2.83 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation. This grant comes on the heels of a $3.5 million federal grant awarded in January 2012 that solidified PSU’s role as one of the premier university transportation centers (UTCs) in the country. The competition for this grant was very stiff with 142 universities vying for just 32 grants.

With this latest grant, OTREC at PSU is now the USDOT’s go-to institution when it comes to “livable communities” research. For this round of grants, the USDOT awarded just five national university transportation centers. Each center was pegged to focus its research on one of the agency’s five categories: economic competitiveness, environmental sustainability, safety, state of good repair, and livable communities.

We asked OTREC’s Justin Carinci if he felt the livable communities designation would limit the scope of their work. “I don’t think it’s limiting,” he said, “because we always consider those other categories as being part of livable communities.”

When PSU won their initial federal grant in 2012, they created the National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC) to reflect the inclusion of their partner universities from outside the state. (Their partners are: the Oregon Institute of Technology, University of Oregon, University of South Florida, and University of Utah).

PSU and its partner universities have put out a call for research proposals for the coming year, but they’ve already committed to several areas of focus. Some of the projects that will be funded in the first year with this grant include:

As any regular readers of BikePortland are aware, the excellent and timely research being done at OTREC has a huge impact on transportation policies and debates. From e-bikes to busting myths about shopping behaviors — PSU continued success in the transportation research field is great for Portland and great for moving policy forward.

Congratulations!

— Read more about transportation research in our archives.

Switch to Desktop View with Comments