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Carbonless footprints: promoting health and climate stabilization through active transportation

Authors :
Joanne Chapman
Lawrence D. Frank
Michael J. Greenwald
Sarah Kavage
Steve Winkelman
Source :
Preventive medicine. 50
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Objective Our objective was to describe how active transportation can help meet health and greenhouse gas emissions goals, and the ability of urban form strategies to impact both issues. In addition, we wanted to assess if there is an inverse relationship between active and motorized forms of travel. Methods A cross-sectional analysis of travel diary data was used to measure relationships among energy (kcal) burned from walking, energy (kcal) burned from motorized transportation, and the ratio of the two (the transport energy index) with regional accessibility and local walkability when adjusting for demographic factors. Multiple linear regression and descriptive statistics were employed to estimate these relationships. Results Transit accessibility, residential density, and intersection density were positive predictors of walk energy and the energy index and inverse predictors of motorized energy. The land use mix variable was negatively and significantly associated with energy burned from walking and from motorized transportation, with no significant impact on the transport energy index. Because a mixed land use pattern places destinations closer together, it reduces distances and thus energy demands for both walking and driving. Conclusions The results support the concept, previously untested empirically, that similar urban form strategies can have cobenefits for both physical activity and climate change.

Details

ISSN :
10960260
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Preventive medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b59e191966d672a67691e63e7938f384