2021
DOI: 10.3389/fbuil.2021.721218
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Walkability and Its Relationships With Health, Sustainability, and Livability: Elements of Physical Environment and Evaluation Frameworks

Abstract: Urban sprawl and increasing population density in urban centers create the challenge to finding ways of sustainable transportation solutions that preserve the convenience of residents while reducing emissions. Therefore, walkability is a core urban design element because of being advantageous onto three fronts: health, livability, and sustainability. Adopting walkability as urban solution relieves conceptual and practical tensions between the individualistic interests manifested in the desire to own and use pr… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 126 publications
(148 reference statements)
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“…These public transport and open space typologies are associated with active transport behaviours, following those measured by Arundel et al 4 We summarised each sample point's local walkable environment using two composite indicators: 1) a daily living score 4,30,31 for local access to a mix of amenities (summing equal-weighted binary access scores to a healthy food market, a convenience store, and a public transport stop within 500m); and 2) a local walkability index 4,31 that sums equal-weighted standardised scores of population density, street intersection density, and daily living score. These measures of well-serviced and walkable neighbourhoods are standard in the built environment and health literature 32,33 with well-established associations with physical activity and walking for transport. 4,30,31 Residential point measures were aggregated and averaged to 250m hexagonal cells serving as empirically derived "neighbourhoods."…”
Section: Open-source Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These public transport and open space typologies are associated with active transport behaviours, following those measured by Arundel et al 4 We summarised each sample point's local walkable environment using two composite indicators: 1) a daily living score 4,30,31 for local access to a mix of amenities (summing equal-weighted binary access scores to a healthy food market, a convenience store, and a public transport stop within 500m); and 2) a local walkability index 4,31 that sums equal-weighted standardised scores of population density, street intersection density, and daily living score. These measures of well-serviced and walkable neighbourhoods are standard in the built environment and health literature 32,33 with well-established associations with physical activity and walking for transport. 4,30,31 Residential point measures were aggregated and averaged to 250m hexagonal cells serving as empirically derived "neighbourhoods."…”
Section: Open-source Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The application of walkability principles for a more human-centered urban accessibility is at the core of current urban regeneration principles, such as health, livability and sustainability, even though neither practitioners nor scholars agree on a universal definition [31]. The quality of walkability is defined by how well the built environment enables slow mobility [32]; however, as recently stated by Baobeid, Koç and Al-Ghamdi [33], no universal standardized walkability theory has been released for policy makers and developers. Therefore, there is an increasing need to combine the land-use planning and transport across Europe due to the spreading environmental issues caused by vehicular traffic in the form of gas emission, noise, land pollution and water [34].…”
Section: Walkability and Accessibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Le diverse fasi della vita possono o meno essere favorevoli; muoversi a piedi richiede delle competenze, e se alcuni cittadini possono disporre di un corpo abile al camminare altri possono viceversa trovarsi in condizioni sfavorevoli. In questo senso, un progetto urbanistico che voglia mettere al centro il tema del camminare senza ridurlo ad affermazione ideologica, deve probabilmente tenere conto anche di quanto il processo di invecchiamento della popolazione potrà nel prossimo futuro far emergere domande specifiche, in cui confort, accessibilità, sicurezza, potranno assumere nuove accezioni, declinando la più generica domanda di 'muoversi bene' (Daconto et al, 2109;Baobeid et al, 2021). È anche rispetto a questo scenario che il progetto del suolo su cui camminiamo dovrà probabilmente attrezzarsi, trovando nuovi dispositivi architettonici capaci non tanto e non solo di fornire soluzioni a nuovi problemi specifici -evitando cioè di trattare gli anziani come una categoria specializzata (Ranzo et al, 2004) -quanto di reinterpretare il suo ruolo in certo senso antieroico, di costruzione di una sostanziale trama infrastrutturale che possa collaborare a esprimere il senso, la dignità e il contegno dello spazio urbano.…”
Section: Suolo: Superfici Affollateunclassified