Article ID: CBB532227056

Walking spaces: Changing pedestrian practices in Britain since c. 1850 (August 2021)

unapi

Walking is one of the most sustainable and healthy forms of everyday travel over short distances, but pedestrianism has declined substantially in almost all countries over the past century. This paper uses a combination of personal testimonies and government reports to examine how the spaces through which people travel have changed over time, to chart the impacts that such changes have had on pedestrian mobility and to consider the shifts that are necessary to revitalise walking as a common form of everyday travel. In the nineteenth century, most urban spaces were not especially conducive to walking, but many people did walk as they had little alternative and the sheer number of pedestrians meant that they could dominate urban space. In the twentieth century, successive planning decisions have reshaped cities making walking appear both harder and riskier. Motorised transport has been normalised and pedestrianism marginalised. Only radical change will reverse this.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB532227056/

Similar Citations

Article Martin Emanuel; (August 2021)
Challenging the system: Pedestrian sovereignty in the early systemisation of city traffic in Stockholm, ca. 1945–1955

Article Stéphanie Ponsavady; (December 2014)
Indigènes into Signs: Incorporating Indigenous Pedestrians on Colonial Roads in 1920s and 1930s French Indochina

Article Tauri Tuvikene; (2023)
Between traffic and walking discourse: Pedestrians in the traffic machine, hints from the Estonian case

Article Cédric Feriel; (August 2023)
Rethinking the dominant modernist planning narrative: Investigating pedestrianisation in Europe, 1960s–1970s

Article Martin Emanuel; (June 2019)
From Victim to Villain: Cycling, Traffic Policy, and Spatial Conflicts in Stockholm, circa 1980

Article Daniel Newman; (June 2017)
Automobiles and Socioeconomic Sustainability: Do We Need a Mobility Bill of Rights?

Book John G. Stehlin; (2019)
Cyclescapes of the unequal city: Bicycle infrastructure and uneven development

Article Carla Assmann; (2020)
The emergence of the car-oriented city: Entanglements and transfer agents in West-Berlin, East-Berlin and Lyon, 1945–75

Article Harald Engler; (December 2020)
Social movement and the failure of car-friendly city projects: East and West Berlin (1970s and 1980s)

Article Marith Dieker; (June 2018)
Keep Moving, Stay Tuned: The Construction of Flow in and through Radio Traffic Reports

Book Karen Chapple; Loukaitou-Sideris, Anastasia; (2019)
Transit-oriented displacement or community dividends?: understanding the effects of smarter growth on communities

Article Martin Emanuel; Daniel Normark; (2023)
(Un)equal footing: Otherings and orderings of urban mobility

Article Robert Braun; Richard Randell; (March 2021)
Getting Behind the Object We Love the Most: Cars: Accelerating the Modern World Victoria and Albert Museum (Museum Review)

Book O'Rourke, Karen; (2013)
Walking and Mapping: Artists as Cartographers

Book Andreas Mayer; (2020)
The Science of Walking: Investigations into Locomotion in the Long Nineteenth Century

Article Guillermo Guajardo Soto; (2021)
Tecnología, poder e infraestructura ferroviaria en la conformación urbana de la Ciudad de México, ca 1870-1960 [Technology, Power, and Railway Infrastructure in the Urban Conformation of Mexico City, ca. 1870-1960]

Book Martin Emanuel; Schipper, Frank; Ruth Oldenziel; (2020)
A u-turn to the future: sustainable urban mobility since 1850

Article Thomas Pettersson; Johan Jansson; Urban Lindgren; (2023)
A barrier to sustainable transports? Path dependence and the Swedish tax deduction for commuting

Book Ruth Oldenziel; Martin Emanuel; A A Albert de la Bruhèze;; F C A Veraart; (2016)
Cycling Cities: The European Experience: Hundred Years of Policy and Practice

Article Elvira Khairullina; Luis Santos y Ganges; (June 2021)
Tram, trolleybus and bus services in Eastern-European socialist urban planning: Case studies of Magdeburg, Ostrava and Oryol (1950s and 1960s)

Authors & Contributors
Emanuel, Martin
Oldenziel, Ruth
Bruhèze, A. A. Albert de la
Mayer, Andreas
Randell, Richard W.
Schipper, Frank
Journals
The Journal of Transport History
Transfers
Quaderns d'Història de l'Enginyeria
Publishers
Berghahn Books
MIT Press
The MIT Press
University of Chicago Press
University of Minnesota Press
Foundation for the History of Technology
Concepts
Mobility
Land transportation
Public policy
Urban planning
Automobiles
Pedestrians
People
Weber, Eduard Friedrich
Weber, Wilhelm Eduard
Time Periods
20th century
21st century
19th century
Places
Berlin (Germany)
Europe
Germany
Sweden
Great Britain
California (U.S.)
Institutions
Victoria and Albert Museum
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment