Description
Several manuals, handbooks and web resources exist to provide varied guidance on planning for and designing bicycle and pedestrian facilities, yet there are no specific indications about which of the varied treatments in these guides work well for users. This project highlights best practices and identifies program characteristics associated with high levels of non-motorized travel, with an emphasis on bicyclists and pedestrians. It highlights practices in the California communities of Davis, Palo Alto and San Luis Obispo. The case studies are used to illustrate how urban communities have integrated non-motorized transportation modes into the physical infrastructure and worked to educate community residents and employees. The most salient themes that emerged from this study are linked to the following user preference: (a) distance to desired land uses and activities; (b) route directness; (c) route connectivity; (d) the separation of motorized and non-motorized transportation modes; (e) safety; (f) convenience; and (g) education and outreach. The aforementioned themes are integrated into key guiding principles that correspond to the trip-making cycle, from the decision to engage in an activity through the choice of route to arrival at the destination.
Publication Date
2-1-2012
Publication Type
Report
Topic
Active Transportation
MTI Project
2906
Mineta Transportation Institute URL
Keywords
Bicycling, Bicycle route, Infrastructure, Walking, Route choice
Disciplines
Transportation
Recommended Citation
Cornelius Nuworsoo. "Integration of Bicycling and Walking Facilities into the Infrastructure of Urban Communities, Research Report 11-05" Mineta Transportation Institute (2012).