Alice Grossman is a former policy analyst at the Eno Center for Transportation who conducted research in various areas of multimodal transportation. Dr. Grossman has worked extensively on research relating to metropolitan transportation planning and performance measurement, mobility-on-demand and TNCs, electronic travel diary development, K-12 and higher education in transportation, active transportation safety, and pedestrian infrastructure asset management and accessibility. She completed her B.A. at Vassar College in Physics and Astronomy, and her Ph.D. at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Civil Engineering.

Media Mentions & Commentary

The Star Tribune|June 29, 2020

As virus restrictions ease, Metro Transit wonders: Will riders come back?

Grossman notes that transit ridership has been declining for years — and that’s been the case at Metro Transit, too.

WIRED|October 24, 2019

American Roads Are Getting Safer—Unless You're Walking

Eno policy analysts Alice Grossman and Romic Aevaz talk about the importance of road design in ensuring pedestrian safety. It demands a mix of design, policy, and enforcement at a variety of levels, from the...