Sustainable Complete Streets Design Criteria and Case Study in Naples, Italy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Methodology
3.1. General Issues
- Reducing traffic crashes and injuries, of both motorized and vulnerable road users;
- Reducing motorized traffic volume and speed;
- Increasing pedestrian, cyclist, and public transport traffic volume;
- Improving the quality of the urban landscape space, for example, its aesthetics and functional ambience;
- Recovering the urban character lost in a historical evolution due to a lack of conscious, coordinated urban planning;
- Creating a homogeneous road environment with regards to the choice of materials, colours, lighting, and treatment of green spaces;
- Increasing ‘green space’ opportunities for pedestrians and cyclists to stop, shop, and socialize;
- Reducing non-renewable energy use and its associated air pollution emissions;
- Reducing nuisances due to traffic noise and urban heat island effects.
3.2. Aesthetics
3.3. Environment
3.4. Liveability
- Ambience, i.e., the conditions of usability, comfort and safety of the public outdoor space system, including its quantity and quality of green amenities; its environmental and ecological function; and its coherent configuration;
- Function, highlighting the added value of high environmental performance in terms of efficiency, functionality, maintenance, durability and recyclability, including a reduction in energy consumption at the urban and building scale; reductions in air, water, noise and visual pollution; and the mitigation of impacts generated by infrastructure systems.
3.5. Safety
3.5.1. Road Safety Inspection
3.5.2. Road Safety Audits
- Standards are often a minimum requirement and combining a series of minimums can leave no room for error, either on the part of the designer, the builder or the final users;
- Some situations require specific expert judgements, which might not be covered by the standards;
- Individual road elements, designed to standard, may be quite safe in isolation but may be unsafe when combined with other standard elements;
- Driver errors, which contribute to 93% of all crashes [49], are bound to happen.
3.5.3. Smarter Growth Neighbourhood Design
- Traffic calming to lower speeds and short-cutting on local streets, and improve ped/bike safety;
- Continuous off-road ped/bike paths, such that biking across a neighbourhood is faster than driving;
- Fewer road lanes of narrower width, with lower speed limits to address the crossing distance and safety;
- Comprehensive bicycle and pedestrian route networks in accord with active travel demand and desire lines, integrated with compact, connected, and coordinated mixed land uses;
- Keeping major mobility roads to perimeter one-way couplets containing service commercial blocks and controlled by roundabouts to reduce the crossing risk and speeds;
- Interspersed public, open, green, restorative spaces throughout, such that no dwelling is longer than a one-minute walk away from public open space, with a major central, car-free piazza that promotes both local and community-wide social interaction;
- Convenient, affordable, and accessible, high-capacity public transit connecting this neighbourhood with major civic destinations.
3.5.4. Pedestrian Crosswalks
3.5.5. Pedestrian Accessibility
- The presence and slope of curb ramps (e.g., crosswalks without ramps or with ramps with an excessive grade are inaccessible for wheelchairs and baby carriages);
- The height of the curbs separating sidewalks from roads (e.g., an excessive height poses significant problems of accessibility—falls and trips—to older people moving between parking spaces and the sidewalk);
- Rumble-strips and tactile-strips for visually-impaired pedestrians (e.g., ramps without preceding ‘warning’ strips are a significant hazard for blind people);
- The accessibility of median breaks (e.g., inaccessible breaks make a refuge ineffective).
3.5.6. Cycle Routes
3.5.7. Sight Distance
3.5.8. Traffic Control Devices
- Greater daytime visibility;
- Greater night-time visibility;
- Greater visibility in the presence of light pollution (e.g., fog);
- Optimum angularity;
- Excellent visibility at wide entrance and observation angles;
- Greater visibility in critical conditions, such as in rain, snow, cloudy weather, at dawn, and at dusk.
3.5.9. Lighting
4. Case Study
4.1. Overview
4.2. Design 1—Urban Streets with the Features of Rural Roads
- The steel median safety barrier was replaced with a blue colour concrete median barrier with a rounded shape (criterion A1, see Table 1);
- Pedestrian crossings with white zebra stripes were embedded in a red colour surface with printed bituminous concrete appearing as brick pavers (criteria S3, S4 and S8);
- The uneven and potholed pavement was replaced with an even, antiskid surface (criteria A1, A3, and E1);
- The carriageways without markings were marked with high-performance cold-hardened road markings delineating 3.50 m wide traffic lanes (criteria A3, S3, and S8);
- Both sides of the road had one-way separated bicycle lanes installed (criteria A2, E1, E2, E3, S3, S5, and S9), with these features:
- −
- Raised from the street and flush with the sidewalk,
- −
- Width equal to 1.50 m,
- −
- Red colour bituminous concrete surface,
- −
- A 0.70 m buffer from the street via a basalt curb and concrete square slabs,
- −
- A 1.00 m buffer from the sidewalks made by concrete square slabs, trees with regular spacing, and lighting poles with LED sources;
- Continuous and accessible sidewalks 1.50 m wide were installed (criteria S3 and S5);
- The existing, obstructive advertising signs were removed from sidewalks (criteria A1 and A2).
4.3. Design 2—Inadequate Layout
- The median was completely redesigned with new trees (indigenous and hardy species) and pedestrian and bicycle paths (criteria A1, A2, E2, E3, S3, S4, and S5);
- In the median, a continuous pedestrian route was created, with central plazas and benches at regular intervals (criteria L1 and L2);
- In the median, one-way separated bicycle lanes were introduced, flush with the sidewalk, 1.50 m wide, with a red colour bituminous concrete surface, and a 0.70 m buffer from the street (criterion S5);
- Parking in the median was removed (criterion S3);
- The former counter-flow bicycle lane was removed (criterion L1);
- Parallel parking was introduced in the nearside with a different surface, i.e., a red colour surface with printed bituminous concrete appearing as brick pavers (criteria A3 and E1);
- Bulb-outs were introduced in all the pedestrian crossings (criteria S4 and S6);
- Lighting poles with LED sources were employed (criteria L2 and S9);
- Antiskid surfaces were added (criteria A3 and E1);
- High-performance cold-hardened road markings were specified, delineating 3.50 m wide outer lanes (where buses are expected) and 3.00 m wide inner lanes (criteria A3, S3, and S8);
- On each side of the Viale, new continuous and accessible sidewalks with concrete square slabs were installed (criteria L1 and S7).
4.4. Design 3—Inadequate Pedestrian and Bicycle Paths
- The replacement of the existing two-way bicycle lane with one-way separated bicycle lanes on both sides (criteria L1, S3, and S5) that were flush with the sidewalk, including a 1.50 m wide, red coloured, bituminous concrete surface, separated by a 1.30 m basalt curb buffer, street trees, and LED street lights (criteria A2, E1, E2, E3, S3, S5, and S9);
- Continuous and accessible pedestrian paths 2.00 m wide (criteria S4 and S7);
- Bulb-outs in all the pedestrian crossings (criteria S4 and S6);
- Lane widths that were reduced from 4.00 m to 3.50 m (criterion S3);
- Antiskid surfaces (criteria A3 and E1);
- High-performance cold-hardened road markings (criteria A3, S3, and S8).
4.5. Design 4—Conflicts between Pedestrians, Cyclists, and Cars
- The removal of the concrete pavement (criteria A1 and A2);
- The installation of green strips on both sides with grass, trees, benches, and lighting poles with LED sources (criteria E1, E2, E3, L1, L2, and S9);
- Installation of a two-way bicycle lane, flush with the sidewalk, 3.00 m wide, with a red colour bituminous concrete surface (criteria L1, L2, S3, and S5);
- Installation of a 1.00 m wide buffer between the bicycle lane and sidewalk, using concrete square slabs (criteria S3, S4, and S5);
- Installation of a 2.00 m wide coloured sidewalk (criteria S3 and S4);
- Installation of ‘gateway’ architectural features at its ends (criteria A1, L1, and L2).
5. Results and Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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General Criteria (Section #) | Specific Criteria | Integration with Complete Streets Criteria |
---|---|---|
Aesthetics (3.2) | A1 Enhancement of the urban environment to recover historical urban character and realize historical area planning goals | Full integration between street design and the planning for redevelopment of the public space |
A2 Integration of materials, colours, lighting, and treatment of green spaces | Sustainable approach to integrate the street design and the built environment | |
A3 Durable materials | Requirements for the use of durable pavements, markings, signs, lightings, and street furniture to reduce the unpleasantness caused by deterioration during its life cycle | |
Environment (3.3) | E1 Eco-design | Life Cycle Design and Life Cycle Assessment of building products |
E2 Planting and trees | Use of green space to form a natural filter and buffer from pollutant gases, dust, and noise as well as to reduce urban heat islands | |
E3 Reduction in traffic-related air pollution and noise | Strengthening of the community system design approach to reduce auto trips and promote healthier active transport choices | |
Liveability (3.4) | L1 Usability and comfort of the public outdoor space system | Attention to the functional and environmental design aspects of public space to ensure that end user and lifecycle impacts are addressed with a view toward sustainability |
L2 Creation of a public space destination in the urban landscape which affects activities and social relations | Coordination between urban planners, landscape architects, and transportation engineers in developing the design of the street as a public space destination in the urban landscape | |
Safety (3.5) | S1 Road safety inspections | Introduction of formal road safety inspections of the existing network |
S2 Road safety audits | Introduction of formal road safety audit of all plans and designs prior to construction | |
S3 SMARTer Growth Neighbourhood design | Safe system design of community land use and transport to reduce auto use and speeding | |
S4 Safe pedestrian routes and crosswalks | Specific criteria to provide a comprehensive, safe pedestrian route network | |
S5 Safe cycle routes and crossings | Specific criteria to provide a comprehensive, safe, and continuous cycle route network | |
S6 Sight distance | Explicit consideration of visibility from the perspective of all roadway users | |
S7 Transit and pedestrian accessibility | Link between accessibility and safety | |
S8 Traffic control devices | High-performance traffic control devices as explicit safety criterion (e.g., roundabouts) | |
S9 Lighting | Use of high-performance lighting as explicit safety criterion (e.g., solar power LEDs) |
General Criteria | Specific Criteria | Design 1 | Design 2 | Design 3 | Design 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aesthetics | A1 Enhancement of the urban environment to recover historical urban character and realize historical area planning goals | √ | √ | √ | |
A2 Integration of materials, colours, lighting, and treatment of green spaces | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
A3 Durable materials | √ | √ | √ | ||
Environment | E1 Eco-design | √ | √ | √ | √ |
E2 Planting and trees | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
E3 Reduction in traffic-related air pollution and noise | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
Liveability | L1 Usability, comfort and safety of the public outdoor space system | √ | √ | √ | |
L2 Creation of a public space destination in the urban landscape which affects activities and social relations | √ | √ | |||
Safety | S1 Road safety inspections | √ | √ | √ | √ |
S2 Road safety audits | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
S3 Fused grid neighbourhood pattern | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
S4 Safe pedestrian routes and crosswalks | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
S5 Safe cycle routes and crossings | √ | √ | √ | √ | |
S6 Sight distance | √ | √ | |||
S7 Transit and pedestrian accessibility | √ | √ | |||
S8 Traffic control devices | √ | √ | |||
S9 Lighting | √ | √ | √ | √ |
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Montella, A.; Chiaradonna, S.; Mihiel, A.C.d.S.; Lovegrove, G.; Nunziante, P.; Rella Riccardi, M. Sustainable Complete Streets Design Criteria and Case Study in Naples, Italy. Sustainability 2022, 14, 13142. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013142
Montella A, Chiaradonna S, Mihiel ACdS, Lovegrove G, Nunziante P, Rella Riccardi M. Sustainable Complete Streets Design Criteria and Case Study in Naples, Italy. Sustainability. 2022; 14(20):13142. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013142
Chicago/Turabian StyleMontella, Alfonso, Salvatore Chiaradonna, Alessandro Claudi de Saint Mihiel, Gord Lovegrove, Pietro Nunziante, and Maria Rella Riccardi. 2022. "Sustainable Complete Streets Design Criteria and Case Study in Naples, Italy" Sustainability 14, no. 20: 13142. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013142
APA StyleMontella, A., Chiaradonna, S., Mihiel, A. C. d. S., Lovegrove, G., Nunziante, P., & Rella Riccardi, M. (2022). Sustainable Complete Streets Design Criteria and Case Study in Naples, Italy. Sustainability, 14(20), 13142. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013142