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Research, Urban Planning, Environment and Health

Severo Ochoa Webinars - The Impacts of Active Transport: a Multi-Disciplinary Research and Practice Field

Photo: Kate Trifo from Pexels
Date
03/06/2020
Hour
First session: 9 h.-12.30 h. Second session: 17 h.- 20.30 h. (CEST time)
Place
On line
Speakers
Chairs: Mark Nieuwenhuijsen (ISGlobal), Belen Zapata-Diomedi (RMIT University), Haneen Khreis (Texas A&M University), James Woodcock (University of Cambridge)

Session 2 - Part 2

 

Session 2 - Part 1

 

Session 1 - Part 2

 

Session 1 - Part 1

 

Aims

  • Bring together the international research and practitioner community in transport impact assessment
  • Learn about readily available tools to assess transport impacts or components of it (e.g. transport demand models for active travel)
  • Learn about state-of-the-art methods for the evaluation of transport impacts
  • Learn from practitioners and decision-makers what evidence and tools are useful to support investment in active travel
  • Establish an international transport impact assessment community

First Session

  • 3 June 2020
  • 09.00 – 12.30h CEST (Central European Summer time)
  • Other time zones: 08.00-11.30h BST; 17.00 – 20.30h AEST; 19:00 – 20.30h NZST

Presenters:

  • Alex Macmillan, University of Otago | Mixed methods for achieving change in the community and in policy: Te Ara Mua Future Streets
  • Dhirendra Singh, RMIT University | Panacea or pain: Should my next transport system model be agent-based?
  • Joe Stordy, Transport for London | Measuring London’s progress towards Vision Zero
  • Emily Coldbeck, Infrastructure Victoria | Actively deciding and prioritizing: the challenges of planning and delivering active transport in Victoria
  • Bert van Wee, Delft University of Technology | How to assess the health impacts of active transport?
  • Audrey de Nazelle, Imperial College | Reducing air pollution: making the case for a systems approach
  • María José Rojo, Polis Network | Post-lockdown mobility planning. Reallocating space to promote active travel
  • Alexandre Santacreu, ITF/RPA | Preventing road deaths through mode shift: lessons from the ITF Safer City Streets network and micro mobility safety research
  • James Woodcock, University of Cambridge | Transport and health modelling next steps?

Chairs:

  • Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, ISGlobal
  • Belen Zapata-Diomedi, RMIT UniversityThe webinar session will take place via Zoom.

Please register through the button below
(remember that you need to register specifically for each seminar)

 

Do you want to ask the speakers a question?
Leave it in the button below!

Second session

  • 3 June 2020
  • 17.00 – 20.30h CEST (Central European Summer Time)
  • Other time zones: 16.00 – 19.30h BST; 08.00 – 11.30h PDT

Presenters:

  • Rolf Moeckel, Technical University of Munich | Modeling Travel Behavior and Health Impacts
  • Susan Handy, University of California, Davis | Evaluating the benefits of bicycle and pedestrian projects in California.
  • Kelly Clifton, Portland State University | Representing Pedestrians in Travel Demand Models: Opportunities & Challenges
  • Neil Maizlish, Centre for Climate Change and Health | Advances in ITHIM Practice and Research, United States
  • Thomas Götschi, University of Oregon | HEAT Global: Adapting WHO's Health Economic Assessment Tool for walking and cycling (HEAT) for a global audience
  • Rachel Aldred, University of Westminster | The Propensity to Cycle Tool: methods for modelling cycling potential for research and policy
  • Stefan Gössling, Lund University | Why cost-benefit analyses could (and should) inspire transport policies
  • Verónica Sánchez, Barcelona City Council | A new model of sustainable mobility: can public space change the way we move?

Chairs:

  • Haneen Khreis, Texas A&M University
  • James Woodcock, University of Cambridge

The webinar session will take place via Zoom.
Please register through the button below
(
remember that you need to register specifically for each seminar)

 

Do you want to ask the speakers a question?
Leave it in the button below!

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