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International projects source: SICRIS

Using Triple Access Planning to Enhance Urban Accessibility and Connectivity in the Face of Deep Uncertainty

Organisations (1) , Researchers (5)
0505  Urban planning Institute of the Republic of Slovenia
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  50172  PhD Mojca Balant  Urbanism  Researcher  2021 - 2024  102 
2.  54307  Andraž Hudoklin  Urbanism  Researcher  2021 - 2024  25 
3.  29242  PhD Luka Mladenovič  Urbanism  Researcher  2021 - 2024  189 
4.  15509  PhD Aljaž Plevnik  Urbanism  Head  2021 - 2024  225 
5.  53836  PhD Thomas Rye  Urbanism  Researcher  2021 - 2024  59 
Abstract
Conventional approaches to mobility planning, based on the forecast-led paradigm, have led to unrealised expectations concerning alleviating problems such as congestion and delivering economic, social and environmental outcomes. Evidence shows plans become rapidly obsolete and lack resilience with regard to future developments. This project aims to improve Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans (SUMPs), addressing both the movement of people and goods, through two significant new considerations: • Triple Access Planning (TAP) - future sustainable urban accessibility can be achieved through the transport system (physical mobility), the land-use system (spatial proximity) and the telecommunications system (digital connectivity); together constituting a Triple Access System (TAS). • Accommodating uncertainty - unpredictable change dynamics such as demographics, economic developments, locational choices, regulatory context, technological breakthroughs, travel demand, and stakeholder behaviour can be explicitly taken into account in the plan, in terms of development and implementation. This research project is highly collaborative and involves seven case study cities in five countries. Through a methodological approach that sequentially addresses theory, practice, design and application, TAP for uncertain futures guidance will be developed and evolved that complements existing SUMP guidelines. The project will strengthen resilience and adaptiveness in SUMPs by advancing theory and translating it into accessible, state-of-the-art, practical guidance.
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