Abstract
Growing concern about transportation emissions and energy security has persuaded urban professionals and practitioners to pursue non-motorized urban development. They need an assessment tool to measure the association between the built environment and pedestrians' walking behaviour more accurately. This research has developed a new assessment tool called the Walkable Integrated Neighbourhood Design (WIND) support tool, which interprets the built environment's qualitative variables and pedestrians' perceptual qualities in relation to quantifiable variables. The WIND tool captures and forecasts pedestrians' mind mapping, as well as sequential decision-making during walking, and then analyses the path walkability through a decision-tree
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CITATION STYLE
KEYVANFAR, A., SHAFAGHAT, A., & LAMIT, H. (2018). A decision support tool for a walkable integrated neighbourhood design using a multicriteria decision-making method. Scientific Journal of Silesian University of Technology. Series Transport, 100, 45–68. https://doi.org/10.20858/sjsutst.2018.100.5
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