| Literature DB >> 34917745 |
Mozhgon Rajaee1, Brenda Echeverri2,3, Zachary Zuchowicz1,4,5, Kristen Wiltfang6, Jennifer F Lucarelli2.
Abstract
Neighborhood walkability is key to promoting health, accessibility, and pedestrian safety. The Accessible, Connected Communities Encouraging Safe Sidewalks (ACCESS) project was developed to assess sidewalks throughout an urban community in Pontiac, Michigan. Data were collected from 2016 to 2018 along eighty miles of sidewalk for tripping hazards, cracking, vegetation, obstructions, overhead coverage, street lighting, buffers, and crosswalks. Data were mapped in ArcGIS with sociodemographic characteristics by U.S. Census block group. The majority of sidewalks had moderate (57.6%) or major (29.4%) sidewalk quality issues, especially maintenance-related impediments (68.6%) and inadequate street lighting or shade coverage (87.2%). The majority of crosswalks had a curb ramp to improve access for people with disabilities (84.4%), however over half lacked a detectable warning strip (55.8%). Degraded sidewalk quality was associated with lower neighborhood socioeconomic status and a higher proportion of Black and Latinx residents. Equity-centered pedestrian infrastructure improvement plans can address these disparities by increasing accessible, safe active transport options that promote physical activity and reduce health disparities. Evaluations like ACCESS can connect public health professionals with municipal planners to advance Complete Streets plans and promote healthy living.Entities:
Keywords: Accessibility; Equity; Pedestrian infrastructure; Sidewalks; Sociodemographics
Year: 2021 PMID: 34917745 PMCID: PMC8666347 DOI: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SSM Popul Health ISSN: 2352-8273
Fig. 1Sidewalks assessed through ACCESS in 2016–2018, including areas with missing sidewalks and streets with sidewalks that were not assessed. Map produced from data provided through Access Oakland's Oakland County and Pontiac, Michigan, data.
[Alternative text: Map of the City of Pontiac with point data for each sidewalk segment assessed throughout the city, lines for areas missing sidewalks, and lines for streets with sidewalks but the condition is unknown. Sidewalks were spatially assessed throughout the city.].
Frequencies of sidewalk and crosswalk characteristics.
| Variables | Categories | Frequency (n) | Percent (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sidewalk segments ( | All | 4488 | 100.0 |
| Complete (∼100 ft) | 3917 | 87.2 | |
| Partial (<75 ft) | 574 | 12.8 | |
| Infrastructure characteristics | Buffer present and/or sidewalk > 3 ft wide | 4280 | 95.4 |
| No buffer present and/or sidewalk < 3 ft wide | 208 | 4.6 | |
| Easement characteristics | Ample or some lighting and overhead coverage, no permanent obstructions | 576 | 12.8 |
| Some or no lighting and/or overhead coverage; no permanent obstructions | 2746 | 61.2 | |
| No lighting or covering, and/or at least one permanent obstruction | 1166 | 26 | |
| Sidewalk condition | No sidewalk cracking or tripping hazard issues | 1436 | 32 |
| Moderate sidewalk cracking or tripping hazard issues | 2460 | 54.9 | |
| Major sidewalk cracking or tripping hazard issues | 586 | 13.1 | |
| Maintenance quality | No sidewalk vegetation growth or landscaping/removable obstructions | 1410 | 31.4 |
| Some sidewalk vegetation growth and/or 1–2 landscaping/removable obstructions | 2311 | 51.5 | |
| Sidewalk vegetation growth and/or 1–3 landscaping/removable obstructions | 767 | 17.1 | |
| Sidewalk quality composite score | Minor or no sidewalk quality issues | 583 | 13 |
| Moderate sidewalk quality issues | 2580 | 57.6 | |
| Major sidewalk quality issues | 1319 | 29.4 | |
| Crosswalks | At intersections | 1304 | 89.6 |
| At driveways | 152 | 10.4 | |
| ADA curb ramps at intersections or driveways | Curb ramp present | 1256 | 86.4 |
| No curb ramp | 197 | 13.6 | |
| Detectable warning strips at intersections | Warning strip present | 608 | 44.2 |
| No warning strip | 767 | 55.8 |
n = 4482; 6 responses missing due to a discrepancy in responses (i.e. “25% of segment had tripping hazards” and “no tripping hazard severity”).
American Community Survey (ACS) Census block group data of sociodemographic variables at assessed sidewalk segments (n = 4488) and the Spearman's rho correlation coefficients of the length of streets without sidewalks and average overall sidewalk quality score per block group (n = 62).
| Assessed sidewalk segments | Correlation coefficients | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Streets without sidewalks | Sidewalk quality composite | ||
| Mean (SD) | rho (p-value) | rho (p-value) | |
| Education | |||
| Less than high school or GED | 24.6 (9.4)** | 0.20 (.875) | -.105 (.435) |
| High school diploma or GED | 37.3 (9.2)** | -.263 (.039)* | .500 (<.001)** |
| Some college or associate's degree | 30.2 (9.4) | .309 (.015)* | -.144 (.284) |
| Bachelor's degree or higher | 7.9 (6.9)** | .108 (.402) | -.291 (.028)* |
| Racial and ethnic composition | |||
| White race | 47.1 (23.9) | -.113 (.381) | -.020 (.880) |
| Black race | 52.1 (25.1)** | .229 (.073) | .069 (.609) |
| Asian, NHOPI, AIAN, and/or other race | 8.8 (9.2) | -.027 (.833) | -.108 (.426) |
| Latinx or Hispanic ethnicity | 18.8 (13.7)* | -.185 (.150) | .157 (.243) |
| Below poverty level | 35.5 (14.1)** | .164 (.204) | .308 (.020)* |
| Household income < $40,000 | 66.2 (16.3)** | -.004 (.975) | .232 (.082) |
| Disability in household | 36.0 (12.3)** | -.193 (.132) | .119 (.380) |
| Vacant housing | 15.9 (11.9)** | -.240 (.060) | .218 (.104) |
| Renter occupied housing units | 49.9 (17.7) | .095 (.464) | .068 (.614) |
| Homes built before 1949 | 40.0 (20.8)** | -.457 (<.001)** | .360 (.006)* |
| Number of housing units in block group | 442.4 (195.6)** | .401 (.001)** | -.390 (.003)** |
*p < .05 for Kruskal-Wallis tests of the overall sidewalk quality composite score by ACS variable; or Spearman's rho of the street length without sidewalks and the average overall sidewalk quality composite score per block group by ACS variable.
**p < .005 for Kruskal-Wallis tests of the overall sidewalk quality composite score by ACS variable; or Spearman's rho of the street length without sidewalks and the average overall sidewalk quality composite score per block group by ACS variable.
All racial data is by race alone or in combination with another race. NHOPI refers to Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander and AIAN refers to American Indian and Alaska Native.
The odds of sociodemographic characteristics of host block groups by sidewalk quality score, ADA curb ramps, and detectable warning strips.
| Model | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall sidewalk quality | Missing ADA curb ramps | Missing detectable warning strips | ||||
| OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | |
| Number of housing units | 0.999 | (0.999, 0.9995) | 0.999 | (0.998, 1.000) | 1.001 | (1.0002, 1.002) |
| Renters | 0.994 | (0.991, 0.998) | 0.980 | (0.969, 0.990) | 0.988 | (0.981, 0.995) |
| Vacant housing | 1.005 | (0.999, 1.011) | 0.994 | (0.978, 1.010) | 0.986 | (0.975, 0.998) |
| Homes built before 1949 | 1.005 | (1.002, 1.009) | 1.011 | (1.001, 1.021) | 1.020 | (1.013, 1.026) |
| Black race | 1.004 | (1.001, 1.008) | 1.017 | (1.006, 1.029) | 1.011 | (1.004, 1.017) |
| Latinx/Hispanic ethnicity | 1.006 | (1.001, 1.012) | 1.043 | (1.026, 1.060) | 1.013 | (1.002, 1.024) |
| Below poverty | 1.010 | (1.006,1.015) | 1.030 | (1.015, 1.045) | 1.003 | (0.994, 1.012) |
| Holds less than high school degree | 0.986 | (0.979, 0.993) | 0.986 | (0.966, 1.007) | 0.980 | (0.967, 0.994) |
Models show the odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for each sociodemographic variable from ordered logistic regression for the overall sidewalk quality score and binary logistic regression for ADA curb ramps and detectable warning strips.