We present preliminary results of a pilot empirical study designed to examine factors associated with pedestrians’ perception of walkability, i.e. the perception of the quality, comfort and pleasantness of streets, and their conductivity to walk. Through a contingent field survey we collected 18 observable street attributes (independent variables), and a synthetic subjective perception of walkability (dependent variable), for the entire street network (408 street segments) of the city of Alghero in Italy. Regression analysis yields high goodness of fit (R-squared = 0.60 using all 18 variables), and points at 9 out of 18 as the most significant factors of perceived walkability (“useful sidewalk width”; “architectural, urban and environmental attractions”; “density of shops, bars, services, economic activities”; “vehicles-pedestrians separation”; “cyclability”; “opportunities to sit”; “shelters and shades”; “car roadway width”; “street lighting”; R-squared = 0.59). Among those, the first five factors in particular show as jointly most important as predictors of perceived walkability.

Factors of Perceived Walkability: A Pilot Empirical Study / Blecic, I., Canu, D., Cecchini, A., Congiu, T., Fancello, G.. - (2016), pp. 125-137. [10.1007/978-3-319-42089-9_9]

Factors of Perceived Walkability: A Pilot Empirical Study

CECCHINI, Arnaldo;CONGIU, Tanja;
2016-01-01

Abstract

We present preliminary results of a pilot empirical study designed to examine factors associated with pedestrians’ perception of walkability, i.e. the perception of the quality, comfort and pleasantness of streets, and their conductivity to walk. Through a contingent field survey we collected 18 observable street attributes (independent variables), and a synthetic subjective perception of walkability (dependent variable), for the entire street network (408 street segments) of the city of Alghero in Italy. Regression analysis yields high goodness of fit (R-squared = 0.60 using all 18 variables), and points at 9 out of 18 as the most significant factors of perceived walkability (“useful sidewalk width”; “architectural, urban and environmental attractions”; “density of shops, bars, services, economic activities”; “vehicles-pedestrians separation”; “cyclability”; “opportunities to sit”; “shelters and shades”; “car roadway width”; “street lighting”; R-squared = 0.59). Among those, the first five factors in particular show as jointly most important as predictors of perceived walkability.
2016
Inglese
a cura di
O. Gervasi; B. Murgante; S. Misra; A. M. A.C. Rocha; C.M. Torre; D. Taniar; B. O. Apduhan; E. Stankova; S. Wang
Computational Science and Its Applications - ICCSA 2016 LECTURE NOTES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE, vol. 9789
125
137
13
Springer, Cham
Walkability; Regression analysis; Walkability perception; Urban design; Walkability audit
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Blecic, Ivan; Canu, Dario; Cecchini, Arnaldo; Congiu, Tanja; Fancello, Giovanna
2 Contributo in Volume::2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
5
268
Factors of Perceived Walkability: A Pilot Empirical Study / Blecic, I., Canu, D., Cecchini, A., Congiu, T., Fancello, G.. - (2016), pp. 125-137. [10.1007/978-3-319-42089-9_9]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/161209
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