Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada

Thermal comfort receives little priority in the planning and design of bicycle pathways. Design tools are required to illustrate the importance of the relationship between climate and bicycling activity to improve the bicycling experience and extend the bicycling season in a cold climate. Microclima...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Klein, Elisabeth Faith
Other Authors: Brown, Robert D.
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10214/5205
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OGU.10214-52052013-10-04T04:14:28ZEnhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, CanadaKlein, Elisabeth FaithBicyclingBicycle infrastructureoutdoor thermal comfortmicroclimatic designbicycle pathway designcommutingThermal comfort receives little priority in the planning and design of bicycle pathways. Design tools are required to illustrate the importance of the relationship between climate and bicycling activity to improve the bicycling experience and extend the bicycling season in a cold climate. Microclimatic and bicycle pathway design principles were integrated with a COMFA model to simulate the thermal comfort of users bicycling on a proposed pathway in Ottawa, Canada. Modelling results predicted bicyclists could be thermally comfortable travelling at a steady-state speed of 16.0-19.2 km/h, but preferred to be cooler when travelling at higher speeds and warmer in colder months when standing at rest. Design implications recognized the compatibility of microclimatic and bicycle pathway design principles and demonstrated how a bioclimatic approach to designing bicycle infrastructure can encourage user thermal comfort, mitigate weather discomforts, accentuate seasonal climate conditions, and address a more inclusive combination of bicycle user design criteria.Brown, Robert D.2012-11-052013-01-03T19:37:06Z2013-01-03T19:37:06Z2013-01-03Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10214/5205en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Bicycling
Bicycle infrastructure
outdoor thermal comfort
microclimatic design
bicycle pathway design
commuting
spellingShingle Bicycling
Bicycle infrastructure
outdoor thermal comfort
microclimatic design
bicycle pathway design
commuting
Klein, Elisabeth Faith
Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada
description Thermal comfort receives little priority in the planning and design of bicycle pathways. Design tools are required to illustrate the importance of the relationship between climate and bicycling activity to improve the bicycling experience and extend the bicycling season in a cold climate. Microclimatic and bicycle pathway design principles were integrated with a COMFA model to simulate the thermal comfort of users bicycling on a proposed pathway in Ottawa, Canada. Modelling results predicted bicyclists could be thermally comfortable travelling at a steady-state speed of 16.0-19.2 km/h, but preferred to be cooler when travelling at higher speeds and warmer in colder months when standing at rest. Design implications recognized the compatibility of microclimatic and bicycle pathway design principles and demonstrated how a bioclimatic approach to designing bicycle infrastructure can encourage user thermal comfort, mitigate weather discomforts, accentuate seasonal climate conditions, and address a more inclusive combination of bicycle user design criteria.
author2 Brown, Robert D.
author_facet Brown, Robert D.
Klein, Elisabeth Faith
author Klein, Elisabeth Faith
author_sort Klein, Elisabeth Faith
title Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada
title_short Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada
title_full Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada
title_fullStr Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing the Thermal Comfort of Utilitarian Bicyclists: An Energy Budget Approach Integrating the Principles of Microclimatic Design with Bicycle Pathway Design in Ottawa, Canada
title_sort enhancing the thermal comfort of utilitarian bicyclists: an energy budget approach integrating the principles of microclimatic design with bicycle pathway design in ottawa, canada
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10214/5205
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