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URS Colours Orange: R-232, G-123, B-0 Blue: R-0, G-81, B-186 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Content


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Content
  • One-Planet-Living
  • One-Planet-Mobility strategies
  • Issue with car
  • Why use car
  • Time budget
  • Habitual decisions making
  • Moral decision making
  • The role of the road

3
One-Planet-Living
4
Per capita ecological footprint of nations
NZ gtgt 5.8 gha pc Available gtgt 1.9 gha pc
WWF, 2004 Living Planet Report
5
One-Planet-Living
If everybody led the lifestyle of OECD countries,
within current technological systems, we would
need three to five planets to sustain
us. BioRegional, 2003
6
One-Planet-Mobility
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One-planet-living in London
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One-planet-mobility
  • 1gha per capita of land to sustain travel habits
  • 15 of total footprint
  • But 37 of households dont have a car, and only
    18 have more than one

9
One-planet-mobility at BedZED
Hackbridge, LB Sutton 82 homes and work
space Private and social housing
Travel
BioRegional
10
One-planet-mobility at BedZED
  • Homes office alternative to commuting
  • HomeZone
  • ZEDcars alternative to private car
  • Monitored 65 reduction in car use at BedZED

BioRegional
11
Issue with car
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Issue with car - traffic
13
Issue with car land use
14
Issue with car - suburbia
15
Issue with car
  • Use of non-renewables,
  • Greenhouse gases and other emissions,
  • Land use,
  • Eutrofication and acidification of ecosystems,
  • Noise,
  • Traffic jams,
  • Alienation of other forms of transport leading to
    restricted access to markets, employment and
    social facilities for disadvantaged groups,
  • Increasing obesity,
  • Road accidents
  • Changes to urban form (suburbanisation) that lead
    to social exclusion and criminality,
  • Impact of poor air quality on health

16
Why use car
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Why car - convenience
18
Why car social facilitator
19
Why car I am what I drive
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Time budget
21
Time budget
Average travel times for the journey-to-work in
23 industrialised cities (1990) (Zeibots M.E.
2003)
22
Time budget
Typical daily tasks that make-up a daily routine
(Zeibots M.E. 2003)
23
Habitual decision making
24
Habitual decision making
  • Intuitive or habitual behaviour follows a
    perception of need straight into a pre-decided
    action there is no evaluation involved and no
    decision has to be taken.
  • Most travel decisions (commute, shopping trips)
    are habitual

Types of decisions making (Weggemans, 2004)
25
Role of the road
26
Role of the road
  • Roads spaces for movements of cars
  • Car-orientated design can often encourage further
    car use and create ugly, anti-social spaces,
    which create barriers to pedestrians and cyclists

27
Role of the road
  • Roads public community spaces
  • Movement corridors (people, cycles, cars)
  • Meeting places,
  • Children's playgrounds
  • Green spaces
  • Key contextual factor in changing travel habits

28
Home Zone
  • Design for multiple road uses driving, walking,
    play
  • Aim reduce car dependency, encourage community
    interaction, improve safety
  • Location - areas of social housing with high
    crime rates and antisocial behaviour

29
Home Zone
http//www.devon.gov.uk/index/environment/planning
/urban_design/homezone.htm
30
Embarcadero Expressway, San Francisco
31
Embarcadera - a new urban setting
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