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Estimating Pedestrian Flows on Street Networks

Author(s)
Sevtsuk, Andres
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Abstract
City governments and planners alike commonly seek to increase pedestrian activity on city streets as part of broader sustainability, community building, and economic development strategies. Though walkability has received ample attention in planning literature, most planners still lack practical methods for predicting how development proposals could affect pedestrian activity on specific streets or public spaces at different times of the day. Cities typically require traffic impact assessments (TIAs) but not pedestrian impact assessments. In this study I present a methodology for estimating pedestrian trip generation and distribution between detailed origins and destinations in both existing and proposed built environments. Using the betweenness index from network analysis, I introduce a number of methodological improvements that allow the index to model pedestrian trips with parameters and constraints to account for pedestrian behavior in different settings. I demonstrate its application in the Kendall Square area of Cambridge (MA), where estimated foot traffic is compared during lunch and evening peak periods with observed pedestrian counts. The proposed approach can be particularly useful for TIAs, neighborhood plans, and large-scale development projects, where pedestrian flow estimates can be used to guide pedestrian infrastructure and safety improvements and public space investments or for locating pedestrian priority streets during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Date issued
2021-10-02
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/164299
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Journal
Journal of the American Planning Association
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Citation
Sevtsuk, A. (2021). Estimating Pedestrian Flows on Street Networks: Revisiting the Betweenness Index. Journal of the American Planning Association, 87(4), 512–526.
Version: Final published version

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