Publication | Closed Access
Neighbourhood Destination Accessibility Index: A GIS Tool for Measuring Infrastructure Support for Neighbourhood Physical Activity
121
Citations
40
References
2011
Year
Urban HealthActivity-travel PatternSocial SciencesBuilt EnvironmentNeighbourhood DestinationsNew Zealand CitiesPublic HealthInfrastructure SupportPublic PolicyGeographyNeighbourhood Physical ActivityUrban PlanningTransportation GeographyGis ToolPedestrian AccessSpatial Information SystemUrban GeographyUrban DesignLivabilityCommunity EnvironmentUrban EconomicsUrban MobilityUrban Space
The sharp increase in obesity in recent years has prompted researchers to examine the various pathways through which urban built environments influence population-level physical activity. Walking access to everyday destinations is one such pathway. This paper describes a measure of pedestrian access to neighbourhood destinations. Using eight domains of neighbourhood destinations (education, transport, recreation, social and cultural, food retail, financial, health, and other retail) we developed a GIS-based ‘Neighbourhood Destination Accessibility Index’ (NDAI) for four New Zealand cities. We found that the intensity of neighbourhood destination opportunities varied considerably among cities and between neighbourhoods within cities. Further, access to neighbourhood infrastructural support tends to be better in more socially deprived places. Potential explanations for the sociospatial distribution of neighbourhood destinations in New Zealand cities include historical processes of residential and economic development and infrastructural investment.
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