Pedestrian Movement Analysis

38
Morphological and Functional Attributes of the Urban Environment and Pedestrian Movement Presented by: Yoav Lerman Tel-Aviv University

description

A study on pedestrian movement done in Tel-Aviv. morphological and functional attributes of the built environment and their affect on pedestrian distribution

Transcript of Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Page 1: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Morphological and Functional

Attributes of the Urban Environment

and Pedestrian MovementPresented by: Yoav Lerman

Tel-Aviv University

Page 2: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

The joy of being a pedestrian

Page 3: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

The sorrow of being a pedestrian

Page 4: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Tel-Aviv Basics

Founded: 1909

Population: 400,000

Land size: 52 sq. km

Metro Population: 3 million

Page 5: Pedestrian Movement Analysis
Page 6: Pedestrian Movement Analysis
Page 7: Pedestrian Movement Analysis
Page 8: Pedestrian Movement Analysis
Page 9: Pedestrian Movement Analysis
Page 10: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Agenda

Research question

Research area location

Methodology

Spatial-physical dimension

Functional dimension

Findings

Page 11: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Research Question

Which attributes of the built environment correlate with the volume of pedestrian movement in two adjacent areas in the center of Tel-Aviv?

Page 12: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Research Area

Page 13: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Research Area

East of Ibn-Gvirol street vs. west of Ibn-Gvirol street

Research area boundary

Sub areas boundary

Page 14: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Methodology

Dependent variable: pedestrian counts

Independent variables: built environment attributes

Positivist methodology based on non-intrusive observations

Looking for statistical correlations between the independent variables and the dependent variable

Page 15: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Each square – 500m X 500m

Page 16: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Two dimensions of the built environment

Spatial-physical dimension The basis of the urban form Extremely durable and rarely modified

Functional dimension The content that fills the form Relatively fast changes

Page 17: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Spatial-Physical Variables

Space syntax measures Connectivity by street name Pavement width Road crossing difficulty Intersection density

Page 18: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Functional Variables

Commercial fronts Residential density Proximity to bus stations

Page 19: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Measures Space Syntax

Use of DepthMap software based upon axial lines analysis:

Connectivity

Control

Integration

- Global Integration – Mean distance from the entire street network

- Local Integration – Mean distance from nearby streets

Page 20: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

A Comment about Mapping

Fixed the street network according to pedestrian routes Boulevards Squares

Page 21: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Street Scheme

Page 22: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Axial Lines

Page 23: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Connectivity

Page 24: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Connectivity

Page 25: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Global Int.

Page 26: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Global Int .

Page 27: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Connectivity by Street Name

Page 28: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Pavement Width

Page 29: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Commercial Fronts

Page 30: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Pedestrian Count Points

95 count points 51 street segments

24 western segments 24 eastern segments 3 border segments

Count method: 5 minutes at each point 5 counts at each point

(once per hour for 5 hours)

Page 31: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Pedestrian Count Points Location

Page 32: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Avg. Pedestrian Volume in each segment (per hour)

Page 33: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Findings

Four correlated variables in descending order: R squared 0.83

1. Connectivity by street name

2. Total commercial front

3. Residential density in subzone

4. Proximity to bus stations

Page 34: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Findings – Western Area

One correlated variable Connectivity by street name

R squared 0.82 R squared 0.88 without boulevards and squares

Page 35: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Findings – Eastern Area

Three correlated variables: R squared 0.86

1. Total commercial front

2. Space syntax connectivity

3. Space syntax control

Page 36: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Findings – Eastern Area (Cont’)

Without the squares (Kikar Hamdina) Three correlated variables:

R squared 0.9

1. Connectivity by street name

2. Space syntax global int.

3. Total commercial front

Page 37: Pedestrian Movement Analysis

Summary

In most cases the spatial-physical structure has greater correlation than the functional structure with pedestrian movement

There are major differences between the western and eastern areas correlations

Connectivity by street name correlated better than space syntax variables

The large square in the eastern side changes the correlation model significantly

Page 38: Pedestrian Movement Analysis