PoliMi Master Thesis | SUMPS AND THE TRANSITION BEHIND PLANNING PARADIGMS

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Alcantara, M.N.P.A However, it is crucial to understand that before establishing the three Belgium regions (Flemish, Walloon, and BCR) in the 1980s, mobility was under the responsibility of two different ministries, one focused on road management and the other on transport. As a result, there was a polarization between car and PT users, where policy discourses towards pedestrians, cyclists, and shared spaces were far from reality. Since the institutional reform in 1988, transport policies have bee in Brussels, it has resulted in massive changes since the resolutions have been concentrated under one minister, which started bringing some innovations toward the mobility sector. Thus, STIB Brussels

the leading company responsible for operating PT in

has become an independent public company, renewing its contract with the

Brussels administration every five years (Hubert et al., 2013). Nowadays, Brussels public transport network, operated by STIB, offers to its users four metro lines (40km), 18 tram lines (147km), and 52 bus lines (452km) that comprise all Brussels municipalities plus eleven others in the periphery area (STIB, 2022). Moreover, the ticket policy is similar to the Viennese one, where it is possible to pay a single fare ticket and passes that go from one day up to an entire year period. Therefore, the public transport system in Brussels is responsible for 1.1 million trips daily (De Muelenaere, 2018), and it could be considered an effective service to a certain extent (Hubert et al., 2013). (Figure 14) goes beyond PT, and it also offers a bike-sharing system (Villo!) with 5,000 bikes (among conventional and also electric options ones) which are rented in 360 stations spread through the city (Villo, 2022). Moreover, the city has been expanding its cycling infrastructure through the years. Nowadays, according to Bruxelles Mobilité (2020a), Brussels offers a total of 190km, split between 109km of cycle tracks (piste cyclable séparée), 44km for bike lanes (piste cyclable marquée) and 37km of cycle routes (piste cyclable suggérée). In a nutshell, the motorization rate is similar to Vienna, where there are 434 vehicles for 1,000 inhabitants in Brussels.

28 Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans [SUMPs] and the transition behind planning paradigms


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6. Conclusions

3min
pages 137-138

Figure 78. Case Studies Comparison Results - Principles of SUMP

2min
pages 133-134

Activities

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Figure 74

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Figure 73

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Figure 75. Lisbon MOVE Results - Principles of SUMP

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Figure 69

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pages 122-123

Figure 70

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Figure 68

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Figure 65

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pages 116-117

Figure 64

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Figure 63. Universal Accessibility, the unifying concept of PUMS

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Figure 60

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Figure 61

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Figure 59. Budapest BMT Results - Principles of SUMP

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pages 107-108

Figure 58

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Figure 57

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Figure 56

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Figure 50

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Figure 55

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two phases

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of intervention

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pages 98-99

Figure 47

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pages 87-89

Figure 45

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network

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Figure 44

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during the April 2017 forum

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originally in French, as la perception de la mobilité et de la sécurité routière

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Figure 43

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pages 80-82

Figure 41

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Figure 40. Vienna STEP UMP Results - Principles of SUMP

2min
pages 75-76

Figure 38. Overview of Vienna STEP UMP's Phase 3 analyses

3min
pages 72-73

Figure 39. Overview of Vienna STEP UMP's Phase 4 analyses

1min
page 74

Figure 33. Structure of Chapter 4

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pages 61-62

Figure 37

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pages 69-71

Table 5

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Figure 36

4min
pages 65-67

Figure 31. Coding guide based on SUMP 12 Steps elements

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pages 58-59

Figure

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pages 56-57

transport modes

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and stations from their bike-sharing systems and cycling infrastructure kilometers

1min
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Figure 24. Lisbon Modal Split 2017

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Figure 23

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Figure 22. Lisbon location and statistics

3min
pages 48-49

Figure 21. Rome Modal Split 2016

1min
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Figure 20

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Figure 19. Rome location and statistics

3min
pages 44-45

Figure 18. Budapest Modal Split 2017

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page 43

Figure 16. Budapest location and statistics

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Figure 15. Brussels Capital Region Modal Split 2019

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Figure 11

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Figure

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Figure

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Figure 4. The 12 Steps of Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning

3min
pages 23-25

Figure 10. Vienna location and statistics

1min
page 33

Table 3. Short Table

2min
pages 26-28

Figure 1. Research Structure

1min
pages 14-15

Table

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page 16

17 Figure 6. eir Mobility/Transport Plans to be SUMPs

1min
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Plans

2min
pages 30-31

Figure

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page 17

Table 1. Paradigms of academic knowledge about urban transport Table 2. Differences between traditional transport planning and Sustainable Urban

2min
pages 18-19
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