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Journal Article

Citation

Hagen OH, Rynning MK. Urban, Plann. Transp. Res. 2021; 9(1): 276-305.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/21650020.2021.1938195

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

To increase cycling shares through urban planning and development, planners need sound tools to assess the built environment. This article presents a methodology to qualitatively determine bikeability, the extent to which it is possible and pleasurable to bike in or through a given area. It is a holistic assessment of four categories of built environment characteristics that affect bikeability. An assessment follows an iterative process combining secondary data and registrations from maps, aerial photos and fieldwork. The methodology does not require specialised tools and is applicable to different urban contexts and purposes. Two examples are included to demonstrate possible uses: assessment of existing built environments to establish a knowledge base when developing short- and long-term cycling plans and strategies, and assessment of planned urban transformations for use in planning processes to ensure new urban developments with a high level of bikeability. Possible methodological improvements are identified. Surveys and interviews with cyclists can provide further understandings of local context. Geographical information systems can inform an assessment but require specialist knowledge, better datasets, and more empirical data on cycling and the built environment from various contexts. As new insights emerge, the methodology must be continually updated to remain valid and reliable.


Language: en

Keywords

bikeability; built environment characteristics; cycling; planning for cycling; qualitative methodology

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