Title
Using space syntax to assess accessibility of multimodal urban hubs and seamless mobility within the hubs Case study Delft-Campus train station
Author
Torabi Kachousangi, F. (TU Delft Transport and Planning)
Mokhtarzadeh, Safoora (Daneshpajoohan Higher Education Institute (DHEI), Isfahan)
van Nes, Akkelies (Western Norway University of Applied Sciences)
van Oort, N. (TU Delft Transport and Planning) 
Hoogendoorn, S.P. (TU Delft Transport and Planning) 
Contributor
van Nes, Akkelies (editor)
de Koning, Remco E. (editor)
Department
Transport and Planning
Date
2022
Abstract
Multimodal hubs connect different modes, allowing people to switch from one mode to another and seamlessly access/egress to/from their origin/destinations. However, there are limited methods to estimate the impact of future measures on the accessibility of multimodal hubs. These future measures could be wide reaching, among others, introduction of different schemes in the planning of the hub or introduction of new modes at multimodal hubs. This study provides interdisciplinary cross-cutting method including transport and urbanism literatures, by using Space Syntax method. This method allows the transport planners to analyse and compare the current situation and the proposed development plan. In this research, we show how changes made in urban spatial configuration can impact the accessibility of intermodal hubs. To learn about the impacts of the spatial configuration of a city on station design, we performed a case study at Delft Campus train station in the Netherlands, which is under construction to become a multimodal hub. Firstly, we analyse the current situation and then the proposed development plan in terms of, integration, choice, accessibility and intelligibility, using segment analyses. Furthermore, the immediate surrounding areas of the station have been analysed by Visual Graphic Analysis to find visual accessibility within the hub. Although the municipality proposed plans claim that the station’s accessibility would be enhanced, our method indicate otherwise and the proposed changes are not highly effective in increasing accessibility. Finally, some design recommendations for multimodal hubs are proposed. This study is a prerequisite for designing the multimodal hubs considering emerging modes.
Subject
Accessibility
multimodal hubs
segment
space syntax
VGA
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:83f12b23-24e5-4d36-b367-b87a98f96df3
Publisher
Western Norway University of Applied Sciences (HVL)
Embargo date
2023-07-01
ISBN
978-82-93677-67-3
Source
Proceedings 13th International Space Syntax Symposium, SSS 2022
Event
13th International Space Syntax Symposium, SSS 2022, 2022-06-20 → 2022-06-24, Bergen, Norway
Bibliographical note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.
Part of collection
Institutional Repository
Document type
conference paper
Rights
© 2022 F. Torabi Kachousangi, Safoora Mokhtarzadeh, Akkelies van Nes, N. van Oort, S.P. Hoogendoorn