Cities are often said to be the engines of the global economy in an age of rapid urbanization. Car-dependent cities - particularly those that characterize North America and Australasia - are largely cities of suburban sprawl, freeways, shopping malls and poor public transport. They are also cities of great opportunity for significant reductions in carbon emissions through transit-oriented intensification within existing suburbs combined with improvements to transit services and shifts to active modes of transport. Such development,however, depends on a multi-scalar understanding that links the shaping of built form and public space at an urban design scale to larger scales of metropolitan structure and urban flows. This research project is...
This paper offers a station-focused snapshot of growth and movement dynamics in Melbourne\u27s passe...
The imperative to transform car-dependent cities for a low-carbon future requires that we engage wit...
The imperative to transform car-dependent cities for a low-carbon future requires that we engage wit...
Cities are often said to be the engines of the global economy in an age of rapid urbanization. Carde...
Australian cities are some of the lowest density and most car-dependent on the planet: intensified u...
The planning problems of neo-liberal cities require theories and methods that are adequate to the ta...
Sustainable urban form presents the most critical problem facing most metropolitan areas following t...
This paper investigates the implications of a transit-oriented intensification scenario for public t...
© 2018 Lawrence Robert SeyersAgainst a backdrop of balkanised transport and land use planning, a fra...
The planning problems of neo-liberal cities require theories and methods that are adequate to the ta...
As in most Australasian cities, Melbourne's public transport system has a strong radial orienta...
The potential of suburban rail stations to be key civic nodes within the network of urban public spa...
Transforming Australian Cities (TAC) was initially commissioned by the Victorian Department of ...
Tram patronage in Melbourne has risen to over 200 million passengers annually, its highest since the...
This paper introduces the first in a developing series of projects run as part of the Public Transpo...
This paper offers a station-focused snapshot of growth and movement dynamics in Melbourne\u27s passe...
The imperative to transform car-dependent cities for a low-carbon future requires that we engage wit...
The imperative to transform car-dependent cities for a low-carbon future requires that we engage wit...
Cities are often said to be the engines of the global economy in an age of rapid urbanization. Carde...
Australian cities are some of the lowest density and most car-dependent on the planet: intensified u...
The planning problems of neo-liberal cities require theories and methods that are adequate to the ta...
Sustainable urban form presents the most critical problem facing most metropolitan areas following t...
This paper investigates the implications of a transit-oriented intensification scenario for public t...
© 2018 Lawrence Robert SeyersAgainst a backdrop of balkanised transport and land use planning, a fra...
The planning problems of neo-liberal cities require theories and methods that are adequate to the ta...
As in most Australasian cities, Melbourne's public transport system has a strong radial orienta...
The potential of suburban rail stations to be key civic nodes within the network of urban public spa...
Transforming Australian Cities (TAC) was initially commissioned by the Victorian Department of ...
Tram patronage in Melbourne has risen to over 200 million passengers annually, its highest since the...
This paper introduces the first in a developing series of projects run as part of the Public Transpo...
This paper offers a station-focused snapshot of growth and movement dynamics in Melbourne\u27s passe...
The imperative to transform car-dependent cities for a low-carbon future requires that we engage wit...
The imperative to transform car-dependent cities for a low-carbon future requires that we engage wit...