Active Travel Oriented Development: Assessing the suitability of sites for new homes

Authors

Joseph Talbot Institute for Transport Studies, University of LeedsMartin Lucas-Smith CycleStreets LtdAndrew Speakman PlanItMegan Streb University of the West of EnglandSimon Nuttall CycleStreets LtdDustin Carlino A/B StreetPatrick Johansson CycleStreets LtdNathanael Sheehan Institute for Transport Studies, University of LeedsNikée Groot Institute for Transport Studies, University of LeedsRobin Lovelace Institute for Transport Studies, University of Leeds

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18757/ejtir.2022.22.4.6015

Abstract

The location of new housing developments, and the provision of safe space for walking and cycling to key destinations around them, have major and long lasting impacts on travel behaviour, health, and environmental outcomes. Transit Oriented Development (TOD) is a well-recognised concept in urban planning, but systematic evidence is often lacking on the likely ‘active travel performance’ of new developments, making it hard for the planning process to support sustainable transport objectives. This paper articulates the concept of ‘Active Travel Oriented Development’ (ATOD) and describes methods for operationalising it. We demonstrate the use of a set of simple metrics to assess the active travel performance of new and proposed development sites. ATOD has the benefits of building on the established concept of TOD and being easy to assess. We conclude that ATOD, and tools for measuring it, are needed to ensure that transport and development policies work in harmony.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Downloads

Published

2022-11-28

How to Cite

Talbot, J., Lucas-Smith, M., Speakman, A., Streb, M., Nuttall, S., Carlino, D., … Lovelace, R. (2022). Active Travel Oriented Development: Assessing the suitability of sites for new homes. European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research, 22(4), 51–72. https://doi.org/10.18757/ejtir.2022.22.4.6015

Issue

Section

Articles