e-space
Manchester Metropolitan University's Research Repository

    A computation-enabled analytical construct for the assessment of alternative urban conditions towards sustainable transport system and to support sustainable travel activities: a space time constraint-based approach

    Cheung, Eric (2020) A computation-enabled analytical construct for the assessment of alternative urban conditions towards sustainable transport system and to support sustainable travel activities: a space time constraint-based approach. Doctoral thesis (PhD), Manchester Metropolitan University.

    [img]
    Preview

    Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

    Download (9MB) | Preview

    Abstract

    The contribution of anthropological emissions to climate change has been a widely acknowledged topic of concern in recent decades towards environmental sustainability. Urban land-based transportation for the movement of people is one of the main contributors to emissions in the UK and other countries. Environmental sustainability is most directly achieved through the reduction of motorised transport activities, including passenger transport, but travel activities related to social and economic activities must be supported in cities. Chapter 1 problematises the goal to support social and economic activities whilst reducing environmental impact as a challenge in planning and city design. The challenge within city design processes is identifying the implications of alternative urban conditions towards urban sustainability before they are built. There is a lack of an adequate computational analytical framework that considers new urban developments and new transport services in the analysis of alternative urban conditions. Chapter 2 identifies known methodological approaches to analyse alternative urban conditions before the fact (ex-ante). Each supported by after the fact (ex-post) studies correspond to the theoretical perspective underlying each approach. A space-time approach has advantages over other probable outcome-based approaches in transportintegrated city design towards transport and travel-related sustainability. However, a space-time approach has been underdeveloped for before the fact (ex-ante) analysis. This study aims address this research gap by extend ingthe space-time approach as a computational analytical construct to facilitate computational scenario modelling and analysis for transport-integrated city design. Chapter 3 outlines the theoretical framework of a space-time approach for architecture in city design. A space-time approach includes the opportunities for activity participation related to the spatial and temporal organisation of building functions and programme, physical spatial transport infrastructure, travel modes, space and time-sensitive public transport services. Together, they facilitate and constrains the inhabitants' possibilities to conduct different combinations of everyday activities. Chapter 4 details the constructive research method employed in this study. This study results in the construction of a computational analytical construct in two parts. First, an operational model extends a space-time analytical approach by integrating new technologies and data sources, with the ability to manipulate the model reflecting alternative urban conditions. Second part consist of an analytical framework for travel mode comparison in alternative urban conditions to address questions in transport and travel-related sustainability within future built environments. Chapter 5 describes the construct implementation and the interpretation of results. The operational model is tested using two reconstructed cases from previous studies. First test with a similar construct set in Karlstad where the results are found to be similar. The second test with a study in Reading with a different construct found the difference 9 between the measures as expected. The operational model's utility is demonstrated through the analytical framework in two case study experiments set in Manchester. This study contextualises a space-time approach for architecture to analyse and think about the possibilities of travel activities facilitated and constrained by alternative urban conditions as part of a city design process. The analytical construct aligns with activitybased travel analysis in transport geography, social sequence analysis, and GPS activity data analysis in geography. Thus, the analytical construct enables a conceptual link between applied research and fundamental research in understanding cities' functioning and evolution. The analytical construct provides a foundation for further research related to system changes in the wider social context that substantially modifies everyday travel-related activity patterns and how city design of alternative urban conditions can respond to changing circumstances.

    Impact and Reach

    Statistics

    Activity Overview
    6 month trend
    200Downloads
    6 month trend
    253Hits

    Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.

    Repository staff only

    Edit record Edit record