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Year 2017, Volume: 2 Issue: 2, 29 - 41, 01.04.2017

Abstract

References

  • Anderson, J., (1980), On Streets, Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
  • Anderson-Watters, C. (2009). Transit-Friendly Design Guidelines. Fredrick County, Maryland.
  • A view from the cycle path (2010). Sustainable safety. Retrieved from a view from the cycle path website URL: http://www.aviewfromthecyclepath.com/2010/01/sustainable-safety.html (Accessed March 26th, 2015)
  • Bongardt, D., Breithaupt, M. and Creutzig, F. (2010), Beyond the Fossil City: Towards low Carbon Transport and Green
  • Growth, Eschborn, Germany, GTZ. Clay, G. (1991), The Street as a teacher, Public Streets for Public Use. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Complete Streets (2010).” Complete Streets Bill Passes in Minnesota “Retrieved from National Complete
  • Streets Coalition website URL: http://www.completestreets.org/policy/complete-streets-bill-passes-in- minnesota/ (Accessed June 9th, 2014)
  • Complete Streets (2010).” Policy Elements “Retrieved from National Complete Streets Coalition website URL: http://www.completestreets.org/changing-policy/policy elements/#vision (Accessed April 23rd, 2014)
  • Duany, A., Plater-Zyberk, E. and Speck, J. (2000), Suburban Nation: the Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream, New York: North Point P.
  • Engwicht, D. (1999) Street Reclaiming: Creating Livable Streets and Vibrant Communities. Philadelphia, PA
  • New Society Publishers. Project for Public Spaces, Inc. (1998). TCRP Report 33: Transit-Friendly Streets: Design and Traffic Management
  • Strategies to Support Livable Communities, TRB, National Research Council, Washington, DC. Gehl, J. (2010), Cities for People, Island Pr.
  • Gehl, J. (2011), Life between Buildings: Using Public Space, 6th Ed., Island Press.
  • Habe, R. (1988). Sharing the urban space of third world city: Street hawking in Nairobi. EDRA 19: People's
  • Needs/Planet Management. Hamilton-Baillie, B. (2000), Home Zones-Reconciling People, Places and Transport, Winston Churchill Memorial Trust
  • Jacobs, J. (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities, New York: Vintage Books.
  • Lillebye, E. (2007). The Street as an Extended Road Notion, Norwegian University of Science and Technology.
  • Lozano, E. (1990), Community Design and the Culture of Cities, Cambridge .MA: Cambridge University Press.
  • Monderman, H., Hamilton-Baillie, B., et al. (2006), Shared Space - : the alternative approach to calming traffic
  • Traffic engineering & control journal vol. 47, no8. Moughtin, C. (1991). The European city street .Part 1: Paths and Places, Town Planning Review 62(1), 51-77.
  • Moughtin, C. (2003). Urban design: Street and Square, Architectural Press, Oxford.
  • Moore, R. C. (1991). Streets as playgrounds, Public Streets for Public Use, New York: Columbia Uni. Press.
  • PPS (2010). “A Guide to Transit-Friendly Streets” Retrieved from Project of Public Spaces website URL: http://www.pps.org/transitfriendlysts/ (Accessed June 19th, 2015)
  • PPS (2009). “The Benefits of Reinventing Streets as Places” Retrieved from Project of Public Spaces website
  • RUDI (2009). Streets for Living-Ben Plowden. Retrieved from the Resource for Urban Design Information website URL: http://www.rudi.net/books/10245 (Accessed June 5th, 2015)

TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP

Year 2017, Volume: 2 Issue: 2, 29 - 41, 01.04.2017

Abstract

This study focuses attention on new approaches that had emerged seeking to create an equitable balance of street space, and it is not possible without a need to compromise between the street movement function as well its place function, the type of compromise varies widely throughout different cities; approaches as 20 mph zones, 30 km/h zones, traffic signal priority, complete streets and transit friendly streets focus on street techniques, whereas ‘woonerf’, ‘home zones’, and ‘shared space’ focus on street environment. The study stands in the belief that it is matter of how the street physical environment affects the way people use it than what it looks like and in doing so, it reviews previous experiences that made targeted efforts to get the most out of their streets, both as transportation links for all modes of commuters and as vital places for people to enjoy, in addition to it addresses how to make streets work with all its components, how to get use of the right of way trying to achieve different users’ needs with having limited constraints; ensuring that everyone can get from A to B easily besides enjoying using the street and concludes with identifying how the change in the street physical environment affect the way people use and perceive the street and ends up with specifying design guidelines that translate the relation between the physical attributes of particular public realm street design and the range of behaviors that this street environment affords users’ behavior and its integration as an incentive for the promotion and integration of non-motorized modes; specifying a street design approach that reconcile people, place and traffic, and contribute in creating safe, attractive and enjoyable streets

References

  • Anderson, J., (1980), On Streets, Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
  • Anderson-Watters, C. (2009). Transit-Friendly Design Guidelines. Fredrick County, Maryland.
  • A view from the cycle path (2010). Sustainable safety. Retrieved from a view from the cycle path website URL: http://www.aviewfromthecyclepath.com/2010/01/sustainable-safety.html (Accessed March 26th, 2015)
  • Bongardt, D., Breithaupt, M. and Creutzig, F. (2010), Beyond the Fossil City: Towards low Carbon Transport and Green
  • Growth, Eschborn, Germany, GTZ. Clay, G. (1991), The Street as a teacher, Public Streets for Public Use. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Complete Streets (2010).” Complete Streets Bill Passes in Minnesota “Retrieved from National Complete
  • Streets Coalition website URL: http://www.completestreets.org/policy/complete-streets-bill-passes-in- minnesota/ (Accessed June 9th, 2014)
  • Complete Streets (2010).” Policy Elements “Retrieved from National Complete Streets Coalition website URL: http://www.completestreets.org/changing-policy/policy elements/#vision (Accessed April 23rd, 2014)
  • Duany, A., Plater-Zyberk, E. and Speck, J. (2000), Suburban Nation: the Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream, New York: North Point P.
  • Engwicht, D. (1999) Street Reclaiming: Creating Livable Streets and Vibrant Communities. Philadelphia, PA
  • New Society Publishers. Project for Public Spaces, Inc. (1998). TCRP Report 33: Transit-Friendly Streets: Design and Traffic Management
  • Strategies to Support Livable Communities, TRB, National Research Council, Washington, DC. Gehl, J. (2010), Cities for People, Island Pr.
  • Gehl, J. (2011), Life between Buildings: Using Public Space, 6th Ed., Island Press.
  • Habe, R. (1988). Sharing the urban space of third world city: Street hawking in Nairobi. EDRA 19: People's
  • Needs/Planet Management. Hamilton-Baillie, B. (2000), Home Zones-Reconciling People, Places and Transport, Winston Churchill Memorial Trust
  • Jacobs, J. (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities, New York: Vintage Books.
  • Lillebye, E. (2007). The Street as an Extended Road Notion, Norwegian University of Science and Technology.
  • Lozano, E. (1990), Community Design and the Culture of Cities, Cambridge .MA: Cambridge University Press.
  • Monderman, H., Hamilton-Baillie, B., et al. (2006), Shared Space - : the alternative approach to calming traffic
  • Traffic engineering & control journal vol. 47, no8. Moughtin, C. (1991). The European city street .Part 1: Paths and Places, Town Planning Review 62(1), 51-77.
  • Moughtin, C. (2003). Urban design: Street and Square, Architectural Press, Oxford.
  • Moore, R. C. (1991). Streets as playgrounds, Public Streets for Public Use, New York: Columbia Uni. Press.
  • PPS (2010). “A Guide to Transit-Friendly Streets” Retrieved from Project of Public Spaces website URL: http://www.pps.org/transitfriendlysts/ (Accessed June 19th, 2015)
  • PPS (2009). “The Benefits of Reinventing Streets as Places” Retrieved from Project of Public Spaces website
  • RUDI (2009). Streets for Living-Ben Plowden. Retrieved from the Resource for Urban Design Information website URL: http://www.rudi.net/books/10245 (Accessed June 5th, 2015)
There are 25 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Nora Osama Ahmed

Publication Date April 1, 2017
Published in Issue Year 2017 Volume: 2 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Ahmed, N. O. (2017). TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies, 2(2), 29-41.
AMA Ahmed NO. TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies. April 2017;2(2):29-41.
Chicago Ahmed, Nora Osama. “TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP”. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies 2, no. 2 (April 2017): 29-41.
EndNote Ahmed NO (April 1, 2017) TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies 2 2 29–41.
IEEE N. O. Ahmed, “TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP”, International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 29–41, 2017.
ISNAD Ahmed, Nora Osama. “TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP”. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies 2/2 (April 2017), 29-41.
JAMA Ahmed NO. TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies. 2017;2:29–41.
MLA Ahmed, Nora Osama. “TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP”. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies, vol. 2, no. 2, 2017, pp. 29-41.
Vancouver Ahmed NO. TOWARDS AN APPROACH TO HUMANIZE THE STREET ENVIRONMENT: RECONCILING PEDESTRIAN-VEHICLE RELATIONSHIP. International Journal of Architecture and Urban Studies. 2017;2(2):29-41.