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| Street Network Analysis× | Walkability Index× | |
|---|---|---|
| 분야 | Urban Studies | Urban Studies |
| 계열 | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| 기원 연도≠ | 2017 | 2010 |
| 창시자≠ | Geoff Boeing (OSMnx); graph-theoretic street analysis tradition | Lawrence Frank and colleagues |
| 유형≠ | Graph-theoretic measurement of street-network structure and connectivity | Composite neighbourhood index of how supportive the built environment is of walking |
| 원전≠ | Boeing, G. (2017). OSMnx: New methods for acquiring, constructing, analyzing, and visualizing complex street networks. Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, 65, 126–139. DOI ↗ | Frank, L. D., Sallis, J. F., Saelens, B. E., Leary, L., Cain, K., Conway, T. L., & Hess, P. M. (2010). The development of a walkability index: Application to the Neighborhood Quality of Life Study. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 44(13), 924–933. DOI ↗ |
| 별칭 | Street Pattern Analysis, Road Network Metrics, Urban Street Connectivity Analysis, Configurational Street Analysis | Frank Walkability Index, Walk Score, Neighborhood Walkability Index, Pedestrian Environment Index |
| 관련 | 4 | 4 |
| 요약≠ | Street network analysis treats a city's streets as a mathematical graph — intersections as nodes, street segments as edges — and measures its structure with graph-theoretic indicators of connectivity, density, centrality, and efficiency. From this representation come the metrics that distinguish a permeable grid from a tree-like cul-de-sac suburb: intersection density, average node degree, the share of dead-ends, betweenness centrality, and circuity (how much longer network routes are than straight lines). Tools such as Geoff Boeing's OSMnx made it routine to download, model, and analyse the street network of any place on Earth from OpenStreetMap, turning street-pattern analysis into a reproducible, comparative science of urban form. | A walkability index measures how well a neighbourhood's built environment supports walking, by combining a small set of land-use and street-design variables into a single score. The influential index developed by Lawrence Frank and colleagues sums standardized measures of residential density, land-use mix, street connectivity, and retail floor-area ratio, giving extra weight to intersection density because connected street grids most strongly enable walking. Consumer tools such as Walk Score popularized the same idea by scoring an address on the proximity and variety of nearby destinations, making walkability a routine input to planning, public health, and real-estate analysis. |
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