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Contested urban streets: Place,traffic and governance conflicts of potential activity corridors
Affiliation:1. Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Warsaw, Poland;2. National Institute for Spatial Policy and Housing, Warsaw, Poland;3. Institute of Geography and Spatial Organization, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland;1. Urban Studies Institute, Georgia State University, 55 Park Place Suite 849D, Atlanta, GA 30302, United States;2. Melbourne School of Design, University of Melbourne, MSD Building Room 323, Masson Road, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;3. Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore, 11 Arts Link, AS1 #03-09, 117573, Singapore;4. ETH Zürich Future Cities Laboratory, 1 Create Way, CREATE Tower #06-01, Singapore 138602;5. School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University, 80 Stamford Road, 178902, Singapore;1. Center for Chinese Public Administration Research, School of Government, Sun Yat-sen University, China;2. Department of Public Administration, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA;3. College of Public Administration, Zhejiang University, China
Abstract:Activity Corridors have emerged as one redevelopment form for accommodating growth within dispersed, car-centric cities. This has seen a new interest in the form and function of urban arterial roads. Efforts to increase development intensity in established suburbia, however, are often highly contentious among local stakeholders. It is unclear whether the offer of improved public transportation infrastructure - a central component of the Activity Corridor concept - influences residents' support for taller or denser built form. This dynamic was explored using a case study along an urban arterial road in Perth, Western Australia. A household survey identified residents' attitudes to increasing development intensity in exchange for varying public transport provision scenarios. The results informed interpretive interviews with planning practitioners. Residents were more supportive of increasing development intensity if public transport was improved. Planners questioned whether recent land use and transport planning approaches adequately reflected community expectations for local “amenity”, and noted several key governance constraints to developing urban Activity Corridors.
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