91青青草

News

Promoting sustainability of transport in cities calls for a mindset change

In an openly available new book, researchers call for human-scale thinking in urban transport.
Aleksanterinkatu

Promoting sustainable mobility is one of the biggest challenges for cities in the 21st century. The now published Transport in Human Scale Cities focuses on this challenge. The book is available for free download at:

The book, which originated from the Network on European Communications and Transport Activities Research (NECTAR) conference held in Helsinki in 2019, offers a fresh perspective for both practicioners and researchers. It puts the critical sustainability challenges of our time at the center and calls for a paradigm shift in the way we think about urban mobility systems.

鈥淭he need for human-scale thinking is even greater now. It is needed in an effort to understand how people move and interact in cities. Such scale is also needed for understanding the organisations that are responsible for the cities,鈥 says Assistant Professor Milo拧 Mladenovi膰 from Aalto University.

鈥淲hen we look at mobility from a human perspective, we are better able to recognise that moving around cities is not just about moving from one place to another as quickly as possible. The experience provided by the mobility environment also plays a big role in people鈥檚 choices. By developing ideas through this lens, we can support mobility that is good for both people and the planet, 鈥 adds doctoral student Elias Willberg from the University of Helsinki.

The book offers multidisciplinary perspectives on, for example, the development of urban and transport planning processes, development of responsible innovation processes, and further considerations for equity in urban mobility systems.

鈥淭he climate crisis and the corona pandemic urge transport researchers and professionals to help transform our cities away from the current car-dominance,鈥 says Karst Geurs, a professor at the University of Twente who chairs NECTAR and is one of the book鈥檚 editors.

鈥淭his moment is in many ways conducive to a change in perspective. The current crises are putting pressure for a new way of organising urban mobility. Information to support change is becoming more accessible, as new types of materials and methods allow us to better understand people moving around the city and the diversity of their needs. Scientific work is also becoming more openly available, and our book is a testament to this. It is open to all interested from practicioners, to students and citizens, concludes Professor Tuuli Toivonen from the University of Helsinki.

The book is dedicated to the memory of dr. Moshe Givoni from Tel Aviv University, whose ambition was to continuously promote research and better policy making to transform our urban mobility systems.

More information about the book:

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Mehil盲ispes盲 Humblebee Aallon kampuksella
Campus, University Published:

Pollinators 鈥 tiny helpers in the work for biodiversity

Bee-assisted biomonitoring has started on the Otaniemi campus.
A man in a suit standing next to a large green metal door in an underground bunker.
Press releases Published:

Doctoral thesis: Finland鈥檚 civil defence shelters protect nearly everyone 鈥 but hotter summers may test their limits

Built over decades, Finland鈥檚 civil defence shelter system covers almost the entire population and has cost the equivalent of three years of defence spending.
Laajalahti nature reserve in Espoo
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Rising sea could erase a significant portion of coastal habitats in Finland

More than a fifth of coastal meadows and sandy beaches may disappear by the turn of the century.
Sustainability Action Boosterin hankekoordinaattori Jasmin J盲rvinen vastaanotti palkinnon New Yorkissa.
Press releases Published:

Groundbreaking grant model supporting student sustainability projects wins award in New York

Sustainability Action Booster grant model, developed by Aalto University, has received a prestigious international recognition from an UN-affiliated educational initiative. The model funds students' own experiments, ideas, and prototypes, and is now being praised for its bold, student-centered approach.