Changing our attitudes towards mobility is a must
The transition to active modes of transport such as walking and cycling has numerous benefits for public health and the environment. Yet their uptake remains limited in the face of an ingrained preference for motorized mobility. It’s a situation which requires political resolve and strategic transformations of public space if it’s to change. These transformations should put the comfort and safety of users first. Anxieties regarding safety are a major obstacle to the wider use of active transport. The challenge, therefore, is to provide active transport infrastructure which ensures safe mobility and reduces conflict with other modes of transport to a minimum.
In practice, this may take the form of designated infrastructure (cycle expressways, cycle lanes separated from other traffic) or any number of “tweaks” to promote more equitable use of the road network (changing traffic circulation plans such as making a street one-way to offer a more direct route for cycle traffic, reducing neighbourhood speed limits, optimizing traffic management at junctions etc.).
All this requires strategic decisions, especially in cities which are not always designed for active transport. Planning policy has to permit the full integration of active modes of transport- in contexts where they are more vulnerable and therefore have been perceived, until recently, as having lower priority -in intermodal traffic management. This is important, because if active modes of transport are to be the perfect alternative to the daily car journey, they have to work in complementarity with collective transport, forming a rational chain of mobility. Outlying urban territories stand to benefit from travel links which offer a safe alternative to the automobile. By promoting active modes of transport we can place them at the heart of our mobility policies. Change in this direction has everywhere been accelerating for some years now, and Egis is making an active contribution to the change.
How? By helping administrations turn their mobility transformation plans into reality, and by working on all kinds of projects such as cycle lanes and pedestrian walkways, traffic circulation plans, collective transport network interfaces, junction management, consulting, and equipment: for parking, services, signals etc.