Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design

The demand for enhanced traffic safety has been growing with rapid increases in the elderly populations of super-aging societies. To cope with the increasing rates of traffic fatalities and injuries among the elderly, co-creative thinking and community-rooted approaches are becoming more important i...

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Main Authors: Kenji Doi, Takanori Sunagawa, Hiroto Inoi, Kento Yoh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-03-01
Series:IATSS Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0386111216300012
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spelling doaj-fd0e665142be4059a037adc3a57690cf2020-11-24T21:06:32ZengElsevierIATSS Research0386-11122016-03-01392879410.1016/j.iatssr.2016.03.001Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive designKenji DoiTakanori SunagawaHiroto InoiKento YohThe demand for enhanced traffic safety has been growing with rapid increases in the elderly populations of super-aging societies. To cope with the increasing rates of traffic fatalities and injuries among the elderly, co-creative thinking and community-rooted approaches are becoming more important in shaping policy and actions for safer and sustainable transportation and traffic. To enhance safety, road space has to be designed as a social space with improved social usability to meet diversifying needs in the future. After discussing multifaceted aspects of an integrated design, this paper aims to identify a possible direction of transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design that covers road design, built-environment and land use design, and community design. While detailing the rapidly increasing fatalities among elderly pedestrians crossing roads, this paper provides a set of logical ideas and arguments for changing the way we address traffic safety and proposes a governance framework for transitioning to safer streets with a focus on the habitus of unconscious separation and externalization of risk that spoils the compactness of road spaces and the appropriate priorities among traffic participants, thereby inhibiting the safety and autonomy of traffic participants on streets.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0386111216300012Road traffic safetyIntegrated designSocial usabilityTransition management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kenji Doi
Takanori Sunagawa
Hiroto Inoi
Kento Yoh
spellingShingle Kenji Doi
Takanori Sunagawa
Hiroto Inoi
Kento Yoh
Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
IATSS Research
Road traffic safety
Integrated design
Social usability
Transition management
author_facet Kenji Doi
Takanori Sunagawa
Hiroto Inoi
Kento Yoh
author_sort Kenji Doi
title Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
title_short Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
title_full Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
title_fullStr Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
title_full_unstemmed Transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
title_sort transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design
publisher Elsevier
series IATSS Research
issn 0386-1112
publishDate 2016-03-01
description The demand for enhanced traffic safety has been growing with rapid increases in the elderly populations of super-aging societies. To cope with the increasing rates of traffic fatalities and injuries among the elderly, co-creative thinking and community-rooted approaches are becoming more important in shaping policy and actions for safer and sustainable transportation and traffic. To enhance safety, road space has to be designed as a social space with improved social usability to meet diversifying needs in the future. After discussing multifaceted aspects of an integrated design, this paper aims to identify a possible direction of transitioning to safer streets through an integrated and inclusive design that covers road design, built-environment and land use design, and community design. While detailing the rapidly increasing fatalities among elderly pedestrians crossing roads, this paper provides a set of logical ideas and arguments for changing the way we address traffic safety and proposes a governance framework for transitioning to safer streets with a focus on the habitus of unconscious separation and externalization of risk that spoils the compactness of road spaces and the appropriate priorities among traffic participants, thereby inhibiting the safety and autonomy of traffic participants on streets.
topic Road traffic safety
Integrated design
Social usability
Transition management
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0386111216300012
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