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The Scenic Route: The Effect of Urban Design on Cycling Route Choice in Berlin

© Clarissa Livingston, ETH Zurich
©

As interest in cycling as a mode of transport rises concurrently with a rise in bicycle traffic volumes in Germany, modeling cyclists’ decisions gains importance. A recently completed online survey shows that in addition to commonly considered attributes like pavement type, the urban design characteristics «complexity» and «streetscape design» also have an effect on cyclists’ decisions to choose one route over another.

The aim of this research was to quantify how cyclists are influenced by various features of the street environment they encounter while cycling.
The stated preference survey investigated the effect of eleven street environment attributes on cyclists’ route choice, including typically considered attributes such as pavement type and travel time, as well as more unconventional attributes, such as the «street surroundings» the level of «complexity», and the presence of «streetscape design».

Operationalizing Urban Design Characteristics

The idea of complexity was conceptualized and presented to the survey participants by contrasting the historical Berlin neighborhoods built during the industrial revolution (colloquially known as «Altbaugebiete») and Berlin neighborhoods built in the decades following World War II. This simplification had a useful side effect: «Streetscape Design» could be defined during the analysis as a composite attribute, being present when both «Complexity» was high/historical buildings were present and when the «street surroundings» included «actively used» buildings. «Actively used» buildings were defined as those whose ground floor activities are recognizable from the street and generally accessible to the public, such as shops, childcare, and libraries. Although the definition by Ewing, et al. (2014)is more complex, in Berlin, streetscape design is (in the simplest terms) present when historical buildings are actively used.

Results

The analysis of the data using discrete choice modeling showed that the presence of a high level of complexity, when represented by historical buildings, and the presence of streetscape design both have a small, but significant impact on the probability of a cyclist choosing a particular route. A high level of complexity/presence historical buildings increases the probability of choosing a route, whereas the presence of streetscape design decreases it. The negative effect of streetscape design, although unexpected, could be explained by the fact that streetscape design can be used as a predictor of high pedestrian counts and that interviews conducted with cyclists by Beyer Bartana (not yet published) indicated that cyclists might avoid high pedestrian traffic.

These results show that these two urban design characteristics have a statistically significant effect on cyclists’ route choice. How a city looks and feels has a small but measurable effect on travel behavior: a useful fact for cities looking to encourage and/or accommodate an increase in bicycle and pedestrian traffic.

Clarissa Livingston is a PhD student at the Institute of Transport Planning and Systems (IVT), where she works on combining agent based transport models with discrete choice modeling. Prior to joining the institute, she obtained her master’s degree in transport planning and operations at the Technische Universität Berlin. This study was conducted as part of her master’s thesis at the TU Berlin and in cooperation with Ilil Beyer Bartana at the German Aerospace Center, Dominik Ziemke from the TU Berlin, and Dr. Francisco Bahamonde-Birke at the Universiteit Utrecht.

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This article has been published in the following newsletter edition:

41 | April 2019: Urbane Qualität / Urban Quality

  • Eine neue Landschaftstypologie zur Sicherung der Landschaftsqualität
  • Urbane Qualitäten: Lernen von der Langstrasse
  • Public Spaces in Post-conflict Cities. Post-conflict Colombia and Ex-Yugoslavia
  • The Scenic Route: The Effect of Urban Design on Cycling Route Choice in Berlin
  • Tom Avermaete, Against Architectural Amnesia
Kurzmeldungen
  • ETH Mobility Initiative
  • Neues EU-Projekt PuSH am ETH Wohnforum – ETH CASE
  • Ignazio Cassis Visits Empower Shack
Weiterbildung
  • MAS, DAS und CAS ETH in Raumplanung 2019/21
  • MAS ETH in Housing
Publikationen
  • Spatial modelling of origin-destination commuting flows in Switzerland
  • Modeling Post-Socialist Urbanization: The Case of Budapest
  • Mirroring Effects: Tales of Territory
  • Acculturating the Shopping Centre
  • Actors’ diversity and the resilience of social-ecological systems to global change
  • Rurbanitas: On the Creation of Urban Qualities in Rural Areas
  • Playing with Density
  • disP 55/1, March 2019
  • Auf Abwegen
  • Future Cities Laboratory Indicia 02
Aktuell
  • The City as Commons: A History of Architectural Codes and Convention
  • Colloquium: Urban Commons: Exploring the Collective Architectural Resources of the City
  • NACH ZÜRICH. Kontroversen zur Stadt. Ein Anarchiv
  • ETH Forum Wohnungsbau: LAND NUTZEN! Wie Städte gerechter wachsen und lebenswert bleiben können
  • Shareland Doctoral Colloquium
  • Mobility Webinar Series, Spring 2019
  • DICHTELUST
  • Current Challenges for Logistics
  • Colloquium: Writing Global Histories
  • Tagung Landmanagement 2019
  • Einfach Zürich

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Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey
Prof. Dr. Kay W. Axhausen
Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete
Prof. Maria Conen
Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman
Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein
Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard
Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
Prof. Dr. Guillaume Habert
Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen
Prof. Damian Jerjen
Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Prof. Hubert Klumpner
Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas
Prof. Freek Persyn
Prof. Dr. Christian Schmid
Prof. Milica Topalovic
Prof. Martina Voser

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