Journal article
Towards an Inclusive Walking Community—A Multi-Criteria Digital Evaluation Approach to Facilitate Accessible Journeys
X Huang, M White, N Langenheim
Buildings | Published : 2022
Open access
Abstract
Half the world’s population now lives in cities, and this figure is expected to reach 70% by 2050. To ensure future cities offer equity for multiple age groups, it is important to plan for spatially inclusive features such as pedestrian accessibility. This feature is strongly related to many emerging global challenges regarding health, an ageing population, and an inclusive society, and should be carefully considered when designing future cities to meet the mobility requirements of different groups of people, reduce reliance on cars, and encourage greater participation by all residents. Independent travel to public open spaces, particularly green spaces, is widely considered a key factor tha..
View full abstractRelated Projects (1)
Grants
Awarded by Australian National Data Service
Funding Acknowledgements
This project is funded by the Australian Research Council Linkage Project [LP190100089], National key R&D programme "Science and Technology Winter Olympics" key project "Evacuation system and support technology for assisting physically challenged communities" [2020YFF0304900], the Beijing High-level Overseas Talents Support Funding, R&D Programme of Beijing Municipal Education Commission (KM202210009008), the NCUT Young Scholar Development Project, and The University Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Programme [108051360022XN353] [108051360022XN370].