Bikeability and the twenty-minute neighbourhood: how infrastructure and destinations influence bicycle accessibility
The "20-minute neighborhood" is often thought of as a place wherein daily needs can be met within a walkable area. With Portland's recently adopted goal of increasing bicycle ridership to a 25 per cent mode share by the year 2030, efforts to incorporate bicycles into this concept will become increasingly important. However, limited research has examined the mix of physical infrastructure and land uses that constitute a "bikeable" neighborhood or community. This paper explores a methodology for assessing a neighborhood's bikeability based on its mix of infrastructure and destinations - essentially the 20-minute neighborhood for bicycles. The area of outer east Portland, with substantially lower bicycling rates than other Portland neighborhoods, is used as a case study and compared to an assessment of neighborhoods that are considered to be bike-friendly (downtown, inner-east and north Portland). The paper examines prior approaches to assessing bikeability, details a new method to measure bikeability, presents the findings, and explores what impact expected or potential transportation and land use changes might have on bikeability.
- Record URL:
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Corporate Authors:
Portland State University. Center for Transportation Studies
Portland, Oregon United States -
Authors:
- McNeil, N
- Publication Date: 2010-6
Language
- English
Media Info
- Pagination: 41p
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: City planning; Cyclists; Modal shift; Neighborhoods; Transportation planning; Travel time
- Uncontrolled Terms: Policy and planning
- Geographic Terms: Portland (Oregon)
- ATRI Terms: Bicycle facilities; Cyclist; Modal shift; Neighbourhood; Town planning; Transport planning; Travel time
- Subject Areas: Pedestrians and Bicyclists; Planning and Forecasting;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01382861
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: ARRB
- Files: ATRI
- Created Date: Aug 22 2012 1:35PM