Microscale Audit of Pedestrian Streetscapes (MAPS), Mini Version

Similar documents
MAPS DATA DICTIONARIES - ABBREVIATED

Figure 4-10: Pedestrian Improvements Types of Potential Station Area Improvements - Place-Making Improvements

STEERING COMMITTEE MEETING June 17, Streetscape Overview Burlington Comprehensive Master Plan

01. VICINITY OF GREENBRAE POC: EXISTING CONDITIONS

APPENDIX A: Complete Streets Checklist DRAFT NOVEMBER 2016

9/25/2018. Multi-Modal Level of Service (MMLOS) Bianca Popescu, Transportation Planner

Route Item and Subscale Reliability Table All Countries

Streets. Safe for Pedestrians 20% 2nd 5,000. Are We People-Friendly?

PRINCE GEORGE S PLAZA METRO AREA PEDESTRIAN PLAN

MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. WAY

Typical Cross Section: DOWNTOWN (Observer Highway - 8th Street)

Clarkson Walkability Audit: Results and Recommendations Summary

Active Transportation Audit

Streetscape: Core Shopping District

Active Neighborhood Checklist: Protocol

Guthriesville Village Manual of Written & Graphic Design Guidelines

James Williams Middle School 915 Acacia Lane

ROUTE 81 CORRIDOR STUDY DESIGN CONCEPTS

Venetia Valley Elementary School. Travel Plan

El Camino Real Specific Plan. TAC/CAC Meeting #2 Aug 1, 2018

TRANSPORTATION STANDARDS

C/CAG. Sunnybrae Elementary School Walking and Bicycling Audit. San Mateo-Foster City School District JUNE 2013

NEWS-CFA: Confirmatory Factor Analysis Scoring for Neighborhood Environment Walkability Scale (Updated: March 15, 2011)

1.3 Pedestrian Environments

NJDOT Complete Streets Checklist

Sidewalk Accessibility Checklist

Active Transportation Facility Glossary

Plant City Walk-Bike Plan

Steps to Conducting a Complete Streets Assessment

MAG Town of Cave Creek Bike Study Task 6 Executive Summary and Regional Significance Report

Agenda. Overview PRINCE GEORGE S PLAZA METRO AREA PEDESTRIAN PLAN

PART A: IDENTIFICATION/LOCATION

County of Spartanburg South Carolina

A Guide to Great Streets: The Basics. September 25, 2009

International Physical Activity Prevalence Study SELF-ADMINISTERED ENVIRONMENTAL MODULE

WalkSafe Vocabulary Matching. 1 pedestrian A marked place to cross the street. 2 intersection A person who is walking. 3 crosswalk. 4 curb.

CONNECTIVITY PLAN. Adopted December 5, 2017 City of Virginia Beach

o n - m o t o r i z e d transportation is an overlooked element that can greatly enhance the overall quality of life for the community s residents.

TOWN OF PAYSON TRAFFIC CALMING MANUAL

Option W: N. Washington Street Project

GIS Based Data Collection / Network Planning On a City Scale. Healthy Communities Active Transportation Workshop, Cleveland, Ohio May 10, 2011

Chapter 6: Along the Street

ARLINGTON COUNTY, VIRGINIA

CURBSIDE ACTIVITY DESIGN

NAPIER AVENUE PEDESTRIAN AND BICYCLE PLAN

PROCEDURE FOR ACCOMMODATING PEDESTRIANS IN WORK ZONES FOR CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE

Niantic Center Elementary School

Complete Streets. Designing Streets for Everyone. Sarnia

PUBLIC REALM MASTER PLAN

Bicycle and Pedestrian Facilities Toolbox (Excerpt from Figure 3.1)

Blueprint for Active Living Communities: Innovative Solutions. James Sallis University of California, San Diego For IOM PA Workshop.

LTAC: Katie Mencarini, Central & Hampton Roads streets and a fifteen minute debrief to discuss the findings. Participants walked along Mill Road

WHITE STREET/ ENGLISH PLAZA STREETSCAPE IMPROVEMENT PROJECT

Walkability Audit Scores and Comments Lacey, Tumwater, and Olympia, WA September 2012

Controlled. Semi-Controlled PAGE 01 CHAPTER 12 INTERSECTIONS

UDC Street Cross Sections

10/30/2012 VIA

Lawrence Avenue Streetscape Concepts August 30, 2011

Portland Peninsula Sidewalk and Ramp Inventory

THE ALAMEDA CONCEPT DESIGN COMMUNITY MEETING 3. A Plan for The Beautiful Way JANUARY 28, 2010

Ballston Station Multimodal Study WMATA and Arlington County. Meeting Minutes

2017 Temporary traffic control guidelines for pedestrians. v.2

Eliminate on-street parking where it will allow for a dedicated bus only lane %

Appendix B - Street Sections

CURRENT ORIGINAL REFERENCE SECTIONS. (Typical Section) (Typical Section) The Parade Island Bay : Concept Option Summary Sheets.

FUNDING OPTIONS FOR COMPLETE STREETS PROJECTS. Dean Ledbetter, PE Senior Planning Engineer NCDOT Division Eleven

5 CIRCULATION AND STREET DESIGN

Balancing Operation & Safety for Motorized and Non-Motorized Traffic

Cluster 5/Module 2 (C5/M2): Pedestrians and Transit Oriented Development (TOD)

Brooklyn Boulevard (County Road 152) Reconstruction Project Phase I. OPEN HOUSE June 20, 2017

complete streets design and construction standards public primer City of Edmonton

Marshalltown Municipal Transit ADA PARATRANSIT APPLICATION

/ ARLINGTON COUNTY, VIRGINIA

McLean Main Street Public Forum Follow-up

STREETSCAPE CONCEPTS

DEFINING THE STREETSCAPE DRAFT

S T A T I O N A R E A P L A N

Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee (BPAC) November 21, 2013

4 GENERIC COST ESTIMATING TOOL

9/21/2016 VIA . RE: The Knot (DR16-270)

UPTOWN REGIONAL BIKE CORRIDORS PROJECT SAN DIEGO ASSOCIATION OF GOVERNMENTS

Appendix C. Bicycle Route Signage

Proposed Mural. Ninth St. Proposed Sitting Area. Proposed Bump-out. Bike Lane and Buffer Zone. Proposed Trees and Sitting Area.

Bicycle and Pedestrian Connectivity Study. Old Colony Planning Council

Community Meeting February 27, 2007 Dorchester Avenue Transportation & Streetscape Improvements Action Plan February 27, 2007

Waipio Point Access Road Acessible Path Concept Site Plan. Waipahu Aloha Clubhouse

Complete Street Analysis of a Road Diet: Orange Grove Boulevard, Pasadena, CA

Cycle Track Design Best Practices Cycle Track Sections

Neighborhood environments and physical activity in youth: from research to practice

INDOT Complete Streets Guideline & Policy

Arlington Public Schools Thomas Jefferson Site Evaluation Transportation Networks. Thomas Jefferson Working Group Meeting #6 November 10, 2014

Healthy Corridor Audit Tool

ASSESSING THE WALKING & BIKING ENVIRONMENT

Bases, Ballasts, and Paving

GENERAL. 1. Description

RC-67M has been updated to include more details to be consistent with both ADAAG and PROWAG. The following slides discusses the general notes found

Why Zone In on Speed Reduction?

Pedestrian Survey Report

Parks, Open Space, Trails and Recreation Master Plan

Table #6 VISION CHARACTERISTICS

Transcription:

Microscale Audit of Pedestrian Streetscapes (MAPS), Mini Version Training Manual & Picture Guide Developed by: Carrie Geremia Kelli Cain Revised February 11, 2014 Tool and protocol developed by: James Sallis, Lawrence Frank, Brian Saelens, Kelli Cain, Terry Conway, Jim Chapman, Carrie Geremia, Abby King San Diego State University Urban Design 4 Health Children s Hospital Seattle Stanford University Medical Center MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 1

I. Field Procedures MAPS-Mini can be completed by using one of two methods: route-level or segment-level data collection. Route-level data collection is a survey of the neighborhood environment between a participant s home and a pre-designated ending destination, and should be used when scores will be calculated at address-level. The route begins on the neighborhood street nearest to a participant s home. In an apartment or condo complex, the rater will begin at the entrance to the complex on the main street. He/ she is not required to enter the grounds to locate the participant apartment/ condo unless necessary to identify the main entrance for the grounds. The number of segments and crossings per route will vary. A participant route will almost always start with a segment at the participant s house. When there is no sidewalk on the participant s side of the street, but there is one on the other side of the street, the route will start with a crossing. Segment-level data collection is completed block-by-block, and is an effective way to canvas an area. Each segment in the area is completed, flanked by a crossing on either side (see example below), until the desired area is complete. MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 2

II. Survey Field Guide 1. Is this primarily a residential or commercial segment? Residential (0) Commercial (1) Decide whether the segment predominantly consists of residential housing or commercial buildings. If the segment is evenly split, choose commercial. 2. How many public parks are present? (includes Dog parks, Equestrian trails) 0 (0) 1 (1) 2 or more (2) A public park should only be counted if they can be accessed along the route walked. Do not count parks beyond the route even if they can be seen from the route. 3. How many public transit stops are present? 0 (0) 1 (1) 2 or more (2) One stop Transit stops located across the street from each other may be counted as 1 stop, as long as they service the same transit line. If the stops are far enough away that a transit user could not quickly run across the street to catch a bus, count 2. Two stops MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 3

4. Are there any benches or places to sit (excluding bus stop benches)? Tables or benches outside of restaurants/cafés (see picture) do not count as a places to sit. These must be public seating areas. 5. Are street lights installed? None (0) Some (1) Ample (2) None Some (e.g., overhead street Ample (e.g., regularly lights on utility poles with spaced pedestrian wide spacing) lamp posts) 6. Are the buildings well maintained? 0-99% (0) 100% (1) 0-99% of buildings well maintained 100% of buildings well maintained (one or more buildings like this) Buildings do not need to be brand new to get a 100% rating. They just need to be well kept and maintained. MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 4

7. Is graffiti/tagging present (do not include murals)? Yes (0) No (1) 8. Is a sidewalk present? A sidewalk need not be nicely paved walking path. As long as it is paved, asphalt or concrete; it will count as a sidewalk. Count any sidewalk along a segment, whether short or long. 9. Are there poorly maintained sections of the sidewalk that constitute major trip hazards? (e.g., heaves, misalignment, cracks, overgrowth) Yes (or no sidewalk present) (0) No (1) Examples of major trip hazards Major Trip Hazard: An increased likelihood of tripping due to a raising or lowing in the walkway. A hazard could be due to plants, tree roots, or general erosion. A major trip hazard would require pedestrians to look down to avoid tripping. MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 5

10. Is a buffer present? No/no sidewalk present (0) Buffer No Buffer Buffer: Separates vehicular and pedestrian zones parallel to the edge of paved roads. They often occupy space between traffic lanes and walking paths that is not intended for either vehicle traffic or walkers. Any buffer on a segment, no matter how long, will be counted. Grass Buffer Tree Buffer Shrub Buffer Tree plantings, telephone poles or parking meters should not be considered as a buffer if there is, on average, more than 20 feet between them along the street segment. A bike lane does not count as a buffer. Brick alone next to a sidewalk would not be counted as a buffer because it is not inhibiting cars from coming onto the sidewalk. MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 6

11. What percentage of the length of the sidewalk/walkway is covered by trees, awnings or other overhead coverage? 0-25% / no sidewalk/walkway (0) 26-75% (1) 76-100% (2) 0-25% coverage 26-75% coverage 76-100% coverage "Coverage" is the percent of the length of walkway covered by trees, awnings, or other structures providing shade. It need not cover the entire width of the sidewalk. Depending on the time of the year, trees may lose their leaves, so make sure to visualize the trees with their full foliage, in the middle of the day. 12. Is there a bike lane? Yes, painted bike lane (1) Yes, bike lane separated from traffic with physical barrier (2) Painted bike lane Bike lane separated from traffic MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 7

13. Is a pedestrian walk signal present? Pedestrian walk signals: Some indication for pedestrians to know when to walk or don t walk. 14. Is there a ramp at the pre-crossing curb? Even if there is no marked crosswalk, there is still a crossing No ramp Ramp 15. Is there a marked crosswalk? Marked crosswalk: A crosswalk is a designated point on a road at which some means are employed to assist pedestrians wishing to cross. They are designed to keep pedestrians together where they can be seen by motorists, and where they can cross most safely with the flow of vehicular traffic. Pedestrian crossings are often at intersections, but may also be at other points on busy roads that would otherwise be perilous to attempt to cross. MAPS-Mini Field Procedures and Picture Guide 8