Thank you for your interest! The guide is available for free indefinitely. To help us track the impact and geographical reach of the download numbers, we kindly ask you not to redistribute this guide other than by sharing this link. Your email will be added to our newsletter; you may unsubscribe at any time.
[gravityform id="3" title="false" description="false" ajax="true"]
Demographics
Analyze who lives, works, and visits the area. Identify areas with high proportions of vulnerable populations such as seniors, children, people with disabilities, or those disadvantaged through other socio-economic factors.
Work with local constituents to ensure that a street project reflects and supports citywide goals and community priorities.
Density
Analyze population densities, including the number of residents and concentration of jobs. Note their geographic locations and analyze trends and projections to understand future change. Document the relationship of densities and access to collective transport.
Support investment in facilities for sustainable mobility to increase the capacity of the street and serve more people.
Prioritize projects that will impact the largest number of people or where the need is the greatest.
History and Culture
Local culture will impact the nuances of how communities use and relate to their streets.
Identify how local cultures, religions, and historically significant events inform how people behave in public spaces through specific rituals or activities.
Understand each project’s local context to ensure culturally appropriate community engagement processes and project outcomes.
Consider how activities such as markets, vendors, bazaars, cafés, and other cultural activities can enhance a sense of place.
Mix of Uses and Destinations
Identify the mix of land uses and map important destinations that attract large numbers of people, such as job centers, parks, cultural and educational institutions, waterfronts, schools, playgrounds, transit stations, and critical services.
Ensure street networks provide sustainable mobility options between communities and important destinations.
Design streets to serve and attract a diverse set of uses and activities, to enhance adjacent uses, and to become destinations in themselves.
Road Safety
Document existing speed limits, average speed traveled, and areas with high concentration of traffic crashes and fatalities.
Lower speed limits, reduce design speed, propose slow zones, and identify locations to implement traffic calming strategies. Create pedestrian-only spaces, shared streets, or transit malls in suitable contexts.
Public Health
Identify geographic areas with high concentrations of chronic diseases and related hazards such as air, water, or noise pollution, or unattended waste.
Prioritize strategies that reduce pollution and promote clean and active modes of transportation. Designate freight travel routes that avoid residential areas. Ensure all neighborhoods are provided with street cleaning services and facilities, focusing especially on streets with high waste volumes.
Access and Mobility
Measure existing mode share, noting shifts at different times of the day and week. Identify areas that lack access to collective transport, cycle, and pedestrian infrastructure.
Design street networks to support desirable mode share goals. Prioritizing infrastructure investments that ensure walking, cycling, and collective transport are more enticing choices than private car use.
Promote car and bike share programs, develop pricing strategies, and manage networks to achieve desirable mode share targets.
Street Networks and Connectivity
Consider the existing and potential role of each street in the larger network. Note how and where networks for different modes of mobility overlap. Identify critical citywide or regional connections along specific corridors and determine how local needs change with context.
Plan, organize, and retrofit street networks to prioritize direct, safe, and convenient walking, cycling, and collective transport access and connectivity. Support connections between different modes of mobility by providing comfortable facilities at transfer points.
Block Sizes
Measure block sizes in the urban fabric and identify how these impact walkability.
Design new street networks to keep blocks small, promoting a walkable city that offers multiple route options.
Identify where large existing blocks can be broken down in scale with safe and well-designed paths and laneways to increase permeability and connectivity for pedestrians and cyclists.
When large blocks cannot be reduced in size, identify areas where mid-block crossings can increase permeability within neighborhoods.
Ecosystems and Habitats
Identify local ecosystems and areas of ecological importance to be protected and enhanced.
Ensure street networks avoid fragmentation of natural habitats. Support local ecosystems and foster biodiversity by constructing habitats within streets. Provide connectivity through landscaped streets for fauna movement, seed and pollen dispersal, and plant migration.
Natural Disasters
Analyze climate and frequency of extreme weather events, noting areas vulnerable to natural disasters.
Plan local infrastructure and support services to manage droughts, heavy rains, and snow falls.
Consider renewable energy sources for street lighting and emergency services.
Identify strategies and materials to support resilience in areas vulnerable to natural disasters, and designate clearly communicated emergency routes.
Geographic Features
Document topography, water bodies, and other natural features to inform new or transformed street patterns.
Encourage street networks to follow natural topography and geographic features in order to avoid any adverse effects on natural resource areas. This can save costs on cut and fill, assist in stormwater management, and enhance a sense of place.
Adapted by Global Street Design Guide published by Island Press.
Next Section —