Accessibility and the so-called ‘15 min city’ paradigm are critical dimensions in agendas involving urban policies. However, when interested in accounting for accessibility from a formal perspective, researchers and practitioners should use pertinent indicators. Additionally, most of the indicators focus on the number of facilities reachable within a given time window, while the counterpart of the latter, i.e., as a measure of attractiveness, such as the number of users that can reach that given area, is not evaluated explicitly. In this paper, a comprehensive method able to capture accessibility and attractivity simultaneously will be presented. The formulation is based on a refinement of the gravity model. As the main input, the actual number of residents was used and included in the computation. Therefore, the resulting values of accessibility and attractivity are intended to represent the real status of different degrees of walkable accessibility in urban areas. As a test field, three Italian cities were explored. The method proposed and discussed throughout the paper is aimed at providing an operative tool for planners, as well as for private stakeholders, when they are in charge of evaluating the degree of ‘walkable’ accessibility. Furthermore, the use of open and standardized data is intended to be a main strength of the proposed methodology, as it can be easily replicated in other contexts.
Boninsegna, F., Nalin, A., Simone, A., Zamengo, B., Cappellari, D., Silvestri, F. (2026). Towards a Fair and Comprehensive Evaluation of Walkable Accessibility and Attractivity in the 15 Min City Scenario Based on Demographic Data. INFRASTRUCTURES, 11(1), 1-19 [10.3390/infrastructures11010004].
Towards a Fair and Comprehensive Evaluation of Walkable Accessibility and Attractivity in the 15 Min City Scenario Based on Demographic Data
Nalin, Alessandro
;Simone, Andrea
;
2026
Abstract
Accessibility and the so-called ‘15 min city’ paradigm are critical dimensions in agendas involving urban policies. However, when interested in accounting for accessibility from a formal perspective, researchers and practitioners should use pertinent indicators. Additionally, most of the indicators focus on the number of facilities reachable within a given time window, while the counterpart of the latter, i.e., as a measure of attractiveness, such as the number of users that can reach that given area, is not evaluated explicitly. In this paper, a comprehensive method able to capture accessibility and attractivity simultaneously will be presented. The formulation is based on a refinement of the gravity model. As the main input, the actual number of residents was used and included in the computation. Therefore, the resulting values of accessibility and attractivity are intended to represent the real status of different degrees of walkable accessibility in urban areas. As a test field, three Italian cities were explored. The method proposed and discussed throughout the paper is aimed at providing an operative tool for planners, as well as for private stakeholders, when they are in charge of evaluating the degree of ‘walkable’ accessibility. Furthermore, the use of open and standardized data is intended to be a main strength of the proposed methodology, as it can be easily replicated in other contexts.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
infrastructures-11-00004.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipo:
Versione (PDF) editoriale / Version Of Record
Licenza:
Licenza per Accesso Aperto. Creative Commons Attribuzione (CCBY)
Dimensione
2.74 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
2.74 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


