The PEQI was developed by the San Francisco Department of Public Health and modified for the Los Angeles street environment by Malia Jones, MPH of UCLA
Christina Batteate, M.P.H., M.A. University of California, Los Angeles
Sustainable Technology & Policy Program
PEQI 2.0 for Southern California
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Presentation Overview
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3:00-3:05 Self introductions by participants
3:05-3:30 Intro to PEQI tool; adaptation to mobile app process; planned 2.0 app upgrades
3:30-3:40 Presentation/Discussion of proposed work and potential partnership roles
3:40-4:00 Q&A
PEQI? A Tool for Change
Accurate assessment of pedestrian conditions
Means of mobilizing community engagement & education around walkability and pedestrian safety
Empirical data for decision-making
Easy format to describe sidewalk conditions
Geocoded information for integration with larger datasets, platforms or end-users.
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PEQI Overview Paper Form version developed by SFDPH in 2008
Street Segment + Intersection items
Table 1: PEQI 2.0 Indicators by Domain Intersection
Safety Traffic Volume
Street Design
Land Use Perceived Safety
Perceived Walkability
Crosswalks
High visibility crosswalk
Intersection lighting
Traffic control
Pedestrian/ Countdown
signal
Wait time
Crossing speed
Pedestrian refuge island
Curb ramps
Intersection traffic calming
features
Pedestrian engineering
countermeasures
Number of
vehicle lanes
Posted speed
limit
Traffic volume
Street traffic
calming features
Continuous sidewalk
Width of sidewalk
Width of throughway
Large sidewalk
obstructions
Sidewalk
impediments
Trees
Driveway cuts
Presence of a buffer
Planters/ gardens
Public seating
Public art/ historic
sites
Retail use and public
places
Pedestrian scale
lighting
Illegal graffiti Litter
Empty spaces
Visual attractiveness
Feeling of safety
Smells
Noise
Overall walkability
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BEQI Overview
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Intersection & Segment Forms
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Pilot Testing Spanish Form
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P.E.Q.I. Process
Paper Form
Scoping (area & priorities)
Training (how to fill-out intersection/segment forms; background on walkability/health)
Data collection
Coding, weighting and mapping P.E.Q.I. scores (SF vs LA process)
Reporting back & deciding next steps
Mobile App
Scoping (area & priorities)
Training (how to use forms and phones; background on walkability/health)
Data collection
Uploading forms, downloading data/maps
Reporting back & deciding next steps
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How scoring works You complete the PEQI form on every street segment and
intersection to get an aggregate score.
Data is used to compute a PEQI score
0-20 pts “environment not suitable for pedestrians”
21-40 pts “poor pedestrian conditions exist”
41-60 pts “basic pedestrian conditions exist”
61-80 pts “reasonable pedestrian conditions exist”
81-100 pts “ideal pedestrian conditions exist”
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How scoring works Codes Weights
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Mapping
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Paper Form Mapping
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a.
b.
P.E.Q.I. Mobile Phone Application (Android platform)
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Geocoding the data
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Less gaps in data
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Photos and Stopwatch
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Automated Scoring & Mapping Via PEQI website:
www.peqiwalkability.appspot.com
Download CSV Spreadsheet with Data
Download KMZ (Google Earth) of Data
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1.0 Results in Google Earth
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version 1.0 2.0
After field-use, recommended upgrades include:
iOS (iPhone, iPad) and web/PC (tablet, laptop)
Custom dashboard for App (lets users customize via OHMAGE)
Toggle categories on/off (specificity of scoring)
Allow for note-taking on each survey question (dig into safety)
Improve map integration with GIS (short term vs long term)
Integrate camera/stopwatch/measurement into App menu
Improved training/support materials and website
Additional languages 19
Mobile App Mapping
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1.0
2.0
Case 1: Boyle Heights, East L.A.
Community Based Participatory Research
ACCION: Academic-Community Collaborative in Our Neighborhood
Boyle Heights Living Streets Initiative
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Goal of ACCION •Work w/community partners to build awareness and capacity to characterize and mitigate problems of traffic, air pollution, goods movement,
•Held focus groups to determine priorities
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ACCION PEQI results
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Cross-Referencing PEQI data with Archival/City data
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Cross-Referencing PEQI data with Archival/City data
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Cross-Referencing PEQI data with Archival/City data
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Community Driven Change
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Boyle Heights Living Streets Initiative 3-pronged strategy Demonstration Projects: Design/build simple, easily removable elements such as sidewalk living rooms and street porches. Prototype Streets: Build three prototype Living Streets in the Boyle Heights neighborhood selected and designed by community residents. These streets feature permanent street improvements such as state of the art pedestrian crossings, bicycle lanes, street trees and bioswales. Implementation Blueprint: Monitor and catalogue the main obstacles to implementing the prototype Living Streets, and identify practical ways to overcome them. Make this blueprint available to others on the Living Streets LA website.
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BHLSI P.E.Q.I. scores presented
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BHLSI Walk-Audit
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Case 2: San Diego Association of Govts
Healthy Works Program & S.D. Health & Human Services
HIA for 47th Street Trolley Station Area Planning/
Health Benefits and Impacts Assessment Project focused on:
Pedestrian/bicycle access & safety
Making transit viable option for residents
Improving access to regional employment & retail
Supporting existing community revitalization efforts
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P.E.Q.I. Mobile Phone Application (Android platform)
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SANDAG: PEQI as part of HIA
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Data Collection Areas
1 2
3 4 5
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8 9 10
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Intersections under scrutiny
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Final PEQI results
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Need for App2.0 adaptability Benefits of App
Time savings calculating scores and mapping
Reduces user error
Need for Adaptations
PEQI 1.0 App is static: user can only change the questionnaire and weights of paper form
Programming in end-user customization of App allows for organizational & community flexibility
Better integration with G.I.S. and analytic software
Improve training and protocol materials
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Paper version 1.0 2.0 SFDPH undertook 2 year upgrade process of survey.
Evidence-based upgrades: Changes made based on the most up-to-date information in transportation and public health journals on pedestrian safety, pedestrian comfort, and walkability.
Tested for inter-rater reliability: changes made to improve the likelihood that two independent auditors would rate the same intersection or street segment in the same way.
Full detail of SFDPH upgrade process at: http://www.sfphes.org/elements/24-elements/tools/180-peqi-update
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1.0 2.0 Indicator Changes
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Intersection Safety Traffic Street Design Land Use Perceived
Safety
Crosswalks High visibility crosswalk Traffic Control Pedestrian Signal Countdown Signal Signal at intersection Wait time Crossing speed Intersection lighting Pedestrian refuge island Curb ramps Crosswalk scramble No turn on red Additional signs for pedestrians Intersection traffic calming features Pedestrian engineering countermeasures
Number of vehicle lanes Two way traffic Posted speed limit Traffic volume Street traffic calming features
Width of sidewalk Width of throughway Large sidewalk obstructions Sidewalk impediments Presence of curb Trees Driveway cuts Presence of a buffer Planters/gardens
Public seating Public art/historic sites Retail use and public places
Pedestrian scale lighting Illegal graffiti Litter Construction sites Empty spaces
LEGEND Modified indicators New indicators Removed indicators
Mobile app 1.0 2.0 Technical upgrades to App will include:
iOS (iPhone, iPad) and web/PC (tablet, laptop)
Custom dashboard for App (lets users customize via OHMAGE)
Toggle categories on/off: specificity of scoring
Allow for note-taking on each survey question
Improve map integration with GIS
Integrate camera/stopwatch/measurement into App menu
Improved training/support materials and website
Additional languages
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Mobile app 1.0 2.0
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1.0
2.0
PEQI: A Tool for Change
Accurate assessment of pedestrian conditions
Means of mobilizing community engagement & education around walkability and pedestrian safety
Empirical data for decision-making
Easy format to describe sidewalk conditions
Geocoded information for integration with larger datasets, platforms or end-users.
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Proposed Work: Phase I
Upgrade PEQI 1.0 PEQI 2.0 Improve access, training materials and functionality
Field test PEQI 2.0 with SFDPH and other groups
Evaluate PEQI 2.0 as: stand-alone app
tool to stimulate community to neighborhood change (built environment and health proxies)
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Proposed Work: Phase II
Expand app user profile (NGOs, Cities, Counties…)
Coordinate with PEQI 2.0 users to monitor street-level improvements
assess magnitude of change (built environment and health).
Evaluate data and propose policy solutions based on results
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Proposed Work: Phase III Integrate PEQI data, other mobile sensing & archival
data into a singular platform (GIS? Google?) BEQI (Bicycle Environmental Quality Index)
Pollution exposure (noise, particles, etc.)
Other built environment influences on health
Further expand PEQI 2.0 and other integrated mapping apps to facilitate built environment change for health (national and beyond)
Improvements in the built environment, pedestrian safety and public health while reducing GHGs.
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Why UCLA Sustainable Technology & Policy Program?
Built and field-tested first app
Vast expertise at UCLA (OIT, Richard Jackson, Luskin)
Connected to several key groups in L.A./CA LA DOT Pedestrian Program
LA DPH PLACE Program
LA Walks
Safe Routes to School National Partnership
LA METRO
SFDPH
Mayor’s Office of Transportation
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Next Steps Fund at least Phase I (~$275,000)
Partner with local & state agencies to expand app use
Establish research methodology for evaluating funding impact on built environment and health
Utilize findings to make evidence-based policy recommendations
Achieve broad improvements in the built environment, pedestrian safety and public health while achieving greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets.
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Thoughts?
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Would PEQI be useful for your group? What is your intended timeframe for use? How else do you see PEQI fitting in with your organizational needs? Are you interested in contributing funds or partnering on any or all of the work?
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