Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city

It is now widely recognized that active travel the collective term for walking and cycling confers a multitude of individual and societal benefits that are qualitatively different from those generated by motorized transport. Regular pedestrians and cyclists can expect to enjoy potential health benef...

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Main Authors: Macmillen, J, Givoni, M, Banister, D
Format: Journal article
Published: Alexandrine Press 2010
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author Macmillen, J
Givoni, M
Banister, D
author_facet Macmillen, J
Givoni, M
Banister, D
author_sort Macmillen, J
collection OXFORD
description It is now widely recognized that active travel the collective term for walking and cycling confers a multitude of individual and societal benefits that are qualitatively different from those generated by motorized transport. Regular pedestrians and cyclists can expect to enjoy potential health benefits, while modal shift to active travel can lead to considerable environmental improvements at a broad range of spatial scales. However, given the need to ensure high-quality decision-making in the transport sector, it is paramount that contemporary evaluation practices keep pace with the shifting nature of policies that explicitly encourage uptake of walking and cycling. Drawing on a numerical example, this paper examines the extent to which the United Kingdom Department for Transport's evaluation framework NATA is sufficiently capable of determining the likely value of investments in active travel and hence whether there is confidence that policy-makers are adequately placed to make informed choices between alternative investments. It is argued that while the overarching logic to evaluating active travel remains relatively sound, changes must be made to the framework if a genuine transition to sustainable urban mobility is to occur.
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spelling oxford-uuid:cda39e9e-107d-478d-a6ae-e0b25147bd472022-03-27T07:29:57ZEvaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable cityJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:cda39e9e-107d-478d-a6ae-e0b25147bd47Transport Studies UnitAlexandrine Press2010Macmillen, JGivoni, MBanister, DIt is now widely recognized that active travel the collective term for walking and cycling confers a multitude of individual and societal benefits that are qualitatively different from those generated by motorized transport. Regular pedestrians and cyclists can expect to enjoy potential health benefits, while modal shift to active travel can lead to considerable environmental improvements at a broad range of spatial scales. However, given the need to ensure high-quality decision-making in the transport sector, it is paramount that contemporary evaluation practices keep pace with the shifting nature of policies that explicitly encourage uptake of walking and cycling. Drawing on a numerical example, this paper examines the extent to which the United Kingdom Department for Transport's evaluation framework NATA is sufficiently capable of determining the likely value of investments in active travel and hence whether there is confidence that policy-makers are adequately placed to make informed choices between alternative investments. It is argued that while the overarching logic to evaluating active travel remains relatively sound, changes must be made to the framework if a genuine transition to sustainable urban mobility is to occur.
spellingShingle Macmillen, J
Givoni, M
Banister, D
Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city
title Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city
title_full Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city
title_fullStr Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city
title_short Evaluating active travel : decision-making for sustainable city
title_sort evaluating active travel decision making for sustainable city
work_keys_str_mv AT macmillenj evaluatingactivetraveldecisionmakingforsustainablecity
AT givonim evaluatingactivetraveldecisionmakingforsustainablecity
AT banisterd evaluatingactivetraveldecisionmakingforsustainablecity