In urban design, walkability is the measure of the overall walking conditions in an area. Urban design concerns the arrangement appearance and functionality of towns and cities and in particular the shaping and uses of urban Public space. [1] The definition for walkability is: "The extent to which the built environment is friendly to the presence of people living, shopping, visiting, enjoying or spending time in an area". [2] Factors affecting walkability include, but are not limited to: land use mix; street connectivity; residential density (residential units per area of residential use); "transparency" which includes amount of glass in windows and doors, as well as orientation and proximity of homes and buildings to watch over the street; plenty of places to go to near the majority of homes; placemaking, street designs that work for people, not just cars and retail floor area ratio. Land use' is also often used to refer to the distinct land use types in Zoning. Permeability or connectivity describes the extent to which urban forms permit (or restrict movement of people or vehicles in different directions The Floor Area Ratio (FAR or Floor Space Index (FSI is the Ratio of the total floor area of buildings on a certain location to the size of the land of that location [3] Major infrastructural factors include access to mass transit, presence and quality walkwayss, buffers to moving traffic (planter strips, on-street parking or bike lanes) and pedestrian crossings, aesthetics, nearby local destinations, air quality, shade or sun in appropriate seasons, street furniture, traffic volume and speed [1][4] and wind conditions. Infrastructure typically refers to the technical structures that support a society such as Roads Water supply, Wastewater, Power grids A walkway is a composite or umbrella term for all formal surfaces supporting walking Parking is the act of stopping a Vehicle and leaving it unoccupied for more than a brief time Segregated cycle facilities are Roads tracks paths or marked lanes designated for use by Cyclists from which motorised traffic is generally excluded Crosswalk button neJPG|right|thumb|The button one pushes to activate the crosswalk signal Aesthetics or esthetics ( also spelled æsthetics) is commonly known as the study of sensory or sensori-emotional values sometimes called Street furniture is a collective term for objects and pieces of equipment installed on streets and roads for various purposes including benches, Bollards Post
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Technological advances such as data mashups have led to the first large-scale, public-access walkability index, Walkscore. In Web development, a mashup is a Web application that combines data from more than one source into a single integrated tool an example is the use of cartographic com. "When you enter an address at walkscore. com," according to the Washington Post, "a Google map appears, studded with blue icons representing nearby restaurants, stores, schools and parks. The Washington Post is the largest and most circulated Newspaper in Washington D A list at the left identifies the mapped destinations and their distance from your starting point. "[5] In addition to the map, the website provides a "walk score," or walkability index, between 0 and 100. Scores above 90 indicate excellent walkability, whereas isolated addresses with no destination in walking range receive scores 25 and lower. At present, the index represents chiefly U. S. locations, but is developing global capability. [6]
The New Zealand government agency for Land based Transport, Transport New Zealand, has commissioned research and developed it's own methodology and tools for assessing walkability[7]. The method is based on the concept of level of service, which is commonly used by transport planners. Level-of-service (LOS is a measure-of-effectiveness by which traffic engineers determine the quality of service on elements of transportation infrastructure The walkability tools that have been developed in New Zealand store information collected during a community street review and produce level of service values for a study area usually consisting of a series of road path lengths and road crossings within a small area. A Community Street Review is a new survey method where a Community Street Audit is combined with a numerical rating system According to the website levelofservice. com, "A Community Street Review is a new survey technique where a Community Street Audit is combined with a numerical rating system. "[8] The website also provides a simplified level of service calculator for anyone to undertake a community street review and produce level of service calculations from it.
Walkability indices have been found to correlate with both Body mass index and physical activity of local populations. The body mass index ( BMI) or Quetelet index, is a statistical measurement which compares a person's weight and height [3][9] Due to discrepancies between residents' health in inner city neighborhoods and suburban neighborhoods with similar walkability measures, it has been suggested that further research is needed to find additional built environment factors to be included in walkability indices. The inner city is the central area of a major city or metropolis South San Jose (cropjpg||thumb|A suburban development in San Jose California. The phrase built environment refers to the man-made surroundings that provide the setting for human activity ranging from the large-scale civic surroundings to the personal places [10]
Increased walkability has proven to have many other individual and community health benefits, such as opportunities for increased social interaction, an increase in the average number of friends and associates where people live, reduced crime (with more people walking and watching over neighborhoods, open space and main streets), increased sense of pride, and increased volunteerism. High walkability has also been found to have economic benefits. [11]
Many communities have embraced pedestrian mobility as an alternative to older building practices that favor automobiles. A pedestrian is a person travelling on foot whether Walking or Running. Reasons for this shift include a recognition that dependency on automobiles is ecologically unsustainable, automobile-oriented environments engender dangerous conditions to both motorists and pedestrians and are generally bereft of aesthetics. [12] Auto-focused designs also diminish walking and needed "eyes on the street" provided by the steady presence of people in an area. Reduced walking also reduces social interaction, mixing of populations and pride in streets and other civic space.
[[Category:Urban studies and planning terminology]
" Bicycle-friendly " describes policies and practices which may help some people feel more comfortable about traveling by Bicycle with other traffic The Fused Grid represents the synthesis of two traditional North American approaches to residential neighborhood planning the traditional nineteenth-century Grid plan, and New Pedestrianism (NP is a more idealistic variation of New Urbanism in urban planning theory founded in 1999 by Michael E New Urbanism is an American Urban design movement that arose in the early 1980s A pedestrian village is a compact pedestrian-oriented neighborhood or town with a mixed-use village center that follows the tenets of New Pedestrianism. Permeability or connectivity describes the extent to which urban forms permit (or restrict movement of people or vehicles in different directions