Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities

Traffic congestion is one of the most vexing city problems and involves numerous factors which cannot be addressed without a holistic approach. Congestion cannot be narrowly tackled at the cost of a city’s quality of life. Focusing on transport and land use planning, this paper examines tr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liang Wen, Jeff Kenworthy, Xiumei Guo, Dora Marinova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-01-01
Series:Urban Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2413-8851/3/1/18
id doaj-30ea3dcc64ef4297bb6417ddb93ec223
record_format Article
spelling doaj-30ea3dcc64ef4297bb6417ddb93ec2232020-11-24T20:48:14ZengMDPI AGUrban Science2413-88512019-01-01311810.3390/urbansci3010018urbansci3010018Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian CitiesLiang Wen0Jeff Kenworthy1Xiumei Guo2Dora Marinova3Sustainability Policy (CUSP) Institute, Curtin University, Perth, GPO Box U1987, WA 6845, AustraliaSustainability Policy (CUSP) Institute, Curtin University, Perth, GPO Box U1987, WA 6845, AustraliaSustainability Policy (CUSP) Institute, Curtin University, Perth, GPO Box U1987, WA 6845, AustraliaSustainability Policy (CUSP) Institute, Curtin University, Perth, GPO Box U1987, WA 6845, AustraliaTraffic congestion is one of the most vexing city problems and involves numerous factors which cannot be addressed without a holistic approach. Congestion cannot be narrowly tackled at the cost of a city’s quality of life. Focusing on transport and land use planning, this paper examines transport policies and practices on both the supply and demand sides and finds that indirect travel demand management might be the most desirable solution to this chronic traffic ailment. The concept of absorption of traffic demand through the renaissance of streets as a way for traffic relief is introduced from two perspectives, with some examples from dense Asian urban contexts to demonstrate this. Firstly, jobs⁻housing balance suggests the return of production activities to residential areas and sufficient provision of diverse space/housing options to deal with work-related traffic. The second approach is to promote the street as a multi-activity destination rather than a thoroughfare to access dispersed daily needs, and to advocate more street life to diminish non-commuting traffic. Based on this, suggestions for better transport planning policies are put forward.https://www.mdpi.com/2413-8851/3/1/18travel demand managementland use patternlow-mobilityactive transportstreet spacemulti-activity destinationbalance and adaptabilityurban fabricsAsian cities.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liang Wen
Jeff Kenworthy
Xiumei Guo
Dora Marinova
spellingShingle Liang Wen
Jeff Kenworthy
Xiumei Guo
Dora Marinova
Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities
Urban Science
travel demand management
land use pattern
low-mobility
active transport
street space
multi-activity destination
balance and adaptability
urban fabrics
Asian cities.
author_facet Liang Wen
Jeff Kenworthy
Xiumei Guo
Dora Marinova
author_sort Liang Wen
title Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities
title_short Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities
title_full Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities
title_fullStr Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities
title_full_unstemmed Solving Traffic Congestion through Street Renaissance: A Perspective from Dense Asian Cities
title_sort solving traffic congestion through street renaissance: a perspective from dense asian cities
publisher MDPI AG
series Urban Science
issn 2413-8851
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Traffic congestion is one of the most vexing city problems and involves numerous factors which cannot be addressed without a holistic approach. Congestion cannot be narrowly tackled at the cost of a city’s quality of life. Focusing on transport and land use planning, this paper examines transport policies and practices on both the supply and demand sides and finds that indirect travel demand management might be the most desirable solution to this chronic traffic ailment. The concept of absorption of traffic demand through the renaissance of streets as a way for traffic relief is introduced from two perspectives, with some examples from dense Asian urban contexts to demonstrate this. Firstly, jobs⁻housing balance suggests the return of production activities to residential areas and sufficient provision of diverse space/housing options to deal with work-related traffic. The second approach is to promote the street as a multi-activity destination rather than a thoroughfare to access dispersed daily needs, and to advocate more street life to diminish non-commuting traffic. Based on this, suggestions for better transport planning policies are put forward.
topic travel demand management
land use pattern
low-mobility
active transport
street space
multi-activity destination
balance and adaptability
urban fabrics
Asian cities.
url https://www.mdpi.com/2413-8851/3/1/18
work_keys_str_mv AT liangwen solvingtrafficcongestionthroughstreetrenaissanceaperspectivefromdenseasiancities
AT jeffkenworthy solvingtrafficcongestionthroughstreetrenaissanceaperspectivefromdenseasiancities
AT xiumeiguo solvingtrafficcongestionthroughstreetrenaissanceaperspectivefromdenseasiancities
AT doramarinova solvingtrafficcongestionthroughstreetrenaissanceaperspectivefromdenseasiancities
_version_ 1716808555102732288