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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In the 21st century, there has been a concerted effort to undo the automobilecentric urban planning of the 20th century, which has resulted in degraded public spaces
that deter citizen permanence. However, the perpetuation of quantitative-based methodologies, along with low public participation, has led to underused public spaces. To create
more appealing spaces, the methods need to feature more public involvement. This article
addresses this gap by implementing the Participatory Mobile Biosensing methodology.
Participants were asked to walk along two high streets in Lisbon using biosensors and, in a
later workshop, to interpret their biodata and co-create scenarios to improve their walking
experience. The participants were able to identify the intangible and physical factors that
affected their walk, as well as devise scenarios to address them. When the participants
formulated their scenarios, they were also able to demonstrate several ideals that influenced
their vision for the streets. The subsequent discussion focused on the relevance of this
methodology to high streets and how participatory methods could further the study of
walkability by incorporating subjective experiences in the creation of public spaces.
Description
Keywords
Walkability Biosensing Scenario co-creation Participatory methods Urban studies
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Pedro, T. & Paiva, D. (2025). Improving the walkability of high streets: a participatory approach using biosensing and scenario co-creation. Urban Science, 9(5), 180. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci9050180
Publisher
MDPI
