Exploring the utility of the spatiallyconstrained accessibility measure in integrating urban cycling and land-use in Pune, India
Publication Date
2013-09-12Author
Walter Alando, Mark Brussel, Mark Zuidgeest, Deepthi Durgi
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
Urban cycling in many developing cities is greatly hindered by the physical barriers occasioned by the
dichotomous approach to urban land-use and transport planning. This divided approach to planning
engenders urban forms that are incompatible with the cycling needs, thus making cycling unsafe and
unattractive. While this is so, literature suggests that the concept of accessibility offers a useful
framework for integrating transport and land-use. However previous studies have not explicitly
investigated the impact of physical barriers to accessibility. This article develops a spatiallyconstrained accessibility measure and explores its utility in integrating urban cycling and land-use.
Revealed and stated preference data is analysed to find out the cycling behaviour and patterns as well
as the physical factors that inhibit cycling in Pune. The results of this analysis enable the study to
calibrate an accessibility measure that takes cognizance of the physical barriers that stifle cycling. A
key finding of the study is that the spatially-constrained accessibility measure can enable different
levels of accessibility in different parts of a city to be estimated under different land-use scenarios.
Accessibility indices derived from this kind of modelling can also offer a common basis for land-use
planners and transport planners to prepare plans that are sensitive to both cycling and land-use needs.
The article identifies the need for empirical studies that deliberately single out the exact sections of the
city roads that constitute barriers to cycling in order to make the measure more useful.