Streets have long been designed to maximize motor vehicle throughput, ignoring other street users. Many cities are now reversing this trend and implementing policies to design more equitable streets. However, few existing tools and metrics enable widescale assessment, evaluation, and longitudinal tracking of these street space rebalancing efforts, i.e., assessing how equitable the current street design is, how it can be improved, and how much progress has been made. This paper develops a needs-gap methodology for assessing the discrepancy between transportation supply and demand in urban streets using existing datasets and automated methods. The share of street space allocated to different street users is measured in 11 boroughs of Montréal...
In 2008 and 2009, Clean Air Partnership (CAP) conducted two research studies on Bloor Street in Toro...
Long have population numbers been on the rise in cities, and especially Darmstadt has witnessed one ...
This study looks at early morning hourly public transit use in London, Ontario, from 5:00 AM to 8:59...
Streets have long been designed to maximize motor vehicle throughput, ignoring other street users. M...
There are many competing demands for the use of urban street space, but very little comprehensive r...
A new approach to assessing the performance of public transport in meeting the needs of transport-di...
This paper describes streetspace allocation analysis, a method that uses street cross-sections to me...
In many cities of the world, road space is increasingly contested. Growing vehicle numbers, traffic ...
This paper concerns a research project to identify spatial gaps in public transport provision for pe...
Bridging the gap between demand and supply in transit service is crucial for public transportation m...
Active transportation modes in North America are often accounted as ‘white strips of gentrification’...
Urban streets have multiple uses (for movement and 'place' activities), leading to tensions and conf...
The concept that streets should be designed for all applicable transportation modes is commonly know...
There are growing global trends to reduce private vehicle usership due to environmental andsocial re...
In order to increase the sustainability of transportation in cities, streets must provide infrastruc...
In 2008 and 2009, Clean Air Partnership (CAP) conducted two research studies on Bloor Street in Toro...
Long have population numbers been on the rise in cities, and especially Darmstadt has witnessed one ...
This study looks at early morning hourly public transit use in London, Ontario, from 5:00 AM to 8:59...
Streets have long been designed to maximize motor vehicle throughput, ignoring other street users. M...
There are many competing demands for the use of urban street space, but very little comprehensive r...
A new approach to assessing the performance of public transport in meeting the needs of transport-di...
This paper describes streetspace allocation analysis, a method that uses street cross-sections to me...
In many cities of the world, road space is increasingly contested. Growing vehicle numbers, traffic ...
This paper concerns a research project to identify spatial gaps in public transport provision for pe...
Bridging the gap between demand and supply in transit service is crucial for public transportation m...
Active transportation modes in North America are often accounted as ‘white strips of gentrification’...
Urban streets have multiple uses (for movement and 'place' activities), leading to tensions and conf...
The concept that streets should be designed for all applicable transportation modes is commonly know...
There are growing global trends to reduce private vehicle usership due to environmental andsocial re...
In order to increase the sustainability of transportation in cities, streets must provide infrastruc...
In 2008 and 2009, Clean Air Partnership (CAP) conducted two research studies on Bloor Street in Toro...
Long have population numbers been on the rise in cities, and especially Darmstadt has witnessed one ...
This study looks at early morning hourly public transit use in London, Ontario, from 5:00 AM to 8:59...