Utilisation of underground pedestrian systems for urban sustainability

Jianqiang Cui* (Corresponding Author), Dong Lin

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Underground pedestrian systems (UPS) have emerged as an urban phenomenon in the city centres of mega-cities, providing alternative walkways that are safe, accessible, efficient and pleasant for pedestrians. Despite many successful UPS in operation around the world, the application and performance of UPS
are not yet well understood by local authorities. While previous studies debated the impacts on cities and people that the development of UPS would bring, an understanding of how to develop UPS to contribute to sustainable urban development, including economic viability, environmental livability and social
equity, should be improved. This paper presents a detailed discussion of potential contributions and challenges in developing UPS within the context of sustainable urban development. It contains a comprehensive analysis of the relationship between UPS and urban development with regard to urban planning
concepts such as the compact city, city resilience, sustainable transport and urban renewal, within the context of contemporary challenges such as the need to achieve economic sustainability, managing a non-renewable and vulnerable underground resource, and humanisation and social sustainability. It demonstrates why UPS development presents opportunities for and challenges to achieving economic viability, environmental livability and social equity, how to develop UPS so that they make effective contributions to sustainable urban development, and how the challenge of each issue has been addressed in
light of the experiences of cities with UPS developments globally.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)194-204
Number of pages11
JournalTunnelling and Underground Space Technology
Volume55
Early online date25 Nov 2015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2016

Keywords

  • underground pedestrian system
  • sustainable urban development
  • urban resilience
  • compact city
  • sustainable transport
  • urban renewal

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