“…The second body of literature focuses on the impact of changing urban form on transport mobility in an intra-urban context, in terms of demand aspect (distance or time traveled), or mode shares (choice of transport mode), and is, thus, responsible for a large proportion of the consumed energy and emissions, which covers many developed cities, i.e., New York [28], Washington DC [29], Hamilton [30], Dortmund [16], Montreal [31], Flanders [15], Wallonia [32], Hong Kong [1,8,33], and Seoul [34]. Moreover, significant efforts have been made to explore the relationship between urban form and CO 2 emissions from commuting, due to the availability of commuting data, especially based on the concept of "excess commuting" [30,33,35].…”