Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments
In the contemporary urban landscape, walkability is shaped by the spatial characteristics of the built environment and its ability to adapt to environmental risks, particularly those posed by climate change. This study explores the intersection of walkability and flood adaptation strategies in water...
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Cogitatio
2025-04-01
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Series: | Urban Planning |
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Online Access: | https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/9561 |
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author | Jakub Gorzka Izabela Burda Lucyna Nyka |
author_facet | Jakub Gorzka Izabela Burda Lucyna Nyka |
author_sort | Jakub Gorzka |
collection | DOAJ |
description | In the contemporary urban landscape, walkability is shaped by the spatial characteristics of the built environment and its ability to adapt to environmental risks, particularly those posed by climate change. This study explores the intersection of walkability and flood adaptation strategies in waterfront public spaces across nine cities in the Baltic Sea Region, analysing their morphological characteristics with a focus on connectivity, accessibility, and climate adaptability. Using a mixed‐method approach that integrates spatial mapping, quantitative metrics, qualitative analysis, and comparative case studies, this research evaluates the effectiveness of urban structure transformations and the introduction of blue‐green infrastructure, floating structures, and nature‐based solutions in enhancing walkability while mitigating flood risks. The findings reveal significant improvements in connectivity, as indicated by extended pedestrian route networks (increases of 6%–28%), enhanced link–node ratios (increases of 24%–39%), and a substantial rise in the number of urban nodes with direct water access (150%–1900%). These results demonstrate that climate‐adaptive urban design not only strengthens flood resilience but also fosters vibrant, walkable, and socially inclusive public spaces. This study provides valuable insights for urban planners, architects, and policymakers, proposing strategies to integrate flood resilience into walkable urban environments. By emphasising the synergy between walkability and climate adaptation, this research advances the discourse on sustainable urban planning. The findings highlight the potential of adaptable waterfronts, incorporating blue‐green infrastructure and flexible design principles, to enhance urban resilience while maintaining public space quality and accessibility. |
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id | doaj-art-2086c842e77b4f03a2aa07ba4bd0b7c0 |
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issn | 2183-7635 |
language | English |
publishDate | 2025-04-01 |
publisher | Cogitatio |
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series | Urban Planning |
spelling | doaj-art-2086c842e77b4f03a2aa07ba4bd0b7c02025-07-10T09:54:39ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352025-04-0110010.17645/up.95614147Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban EnvironmentsJakub Gorzka0Izabela Burda1Lucyna Nyka2Faculty of Architecture, Gdańsk University of Technology, PolandFaculty of Architecture, Gdańsk University of Technology, PolandFaculty of Architecture, Gdańsk University of Technology, PolandIn the contemporary urban landscape, walkability is shaped by the spatial characteristics of the built environment and its ability to adapt to environmental risks, particularly those posed by climate change. This study explores the intersection of walkability and flood adaptation strategies in waterfront public spaces across nine cities in the Baltic Sea Region, analysing their morphological characteristics with a focus on connectivity, accessibility, and climate adaptability. Using a mixed‐method approach that integrates spatial mapping, quantitative metrics, qualitative analysis, and comparative case studies, this research evaluates the effectiveness of urban structure transformations and the introduction of blue‐green infrastructure, floating structures, and nature‐based solutions in enhancing walkability while mitigating flood risks. The findings reveal significant improvements in connectivity, as indicated by extended pedestrian route networks (increases of 6%–28%), enhanced link–node ratios (increases of 24%–39%), and a substantial rise in the number of urban nodes with direct water access (150%–1900%). These results demonstrate that climate‐adaptive urban design not only strengthens flood resilience but also fosters vibrant, walkable, and socially inclusive public spaces. This study provides valuable insights for urban planners, architects, and policymakers, proposing strategies to integrate flood resilience into walkable urban environments. By emphasising the synergy between walkability and climate adaptation, this research advances the discourse on sustainable urban planning. The findings highlight the potential of adaptable waterfronts, incorporating blue‐green infrastructure and flexible design principles, to enhance urban resilience while maintaining public space quality and accessibility.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/9561blue‐green infrastructureflood riskpublic space designsustainabilityurban resiliencewalkability |
spellingShingle | Jakub Gorzka Izabela Burda Lucyna Nyka Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments Urban Planning blue‐green infrastructure flood risk public space design sustainability urban resilience walkability |
title | Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments |
title_full | Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments |
title_fullStr | Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments |
title_full_unstemmed | Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments |
title_short | Walkability and Flood Resilience: Public Space Design in Climate‐Sensitive Urban Environments |
title_sort | walkability and flood resilience public space design in climate sensitive urban environments |
topic | blue‐green infrastructure flood risk public space design sustainability urban resilience walkability |
url | https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/9561 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT jakubgorzka walkabilityandfloodresiliencepublicspacedesigninclimatesensitiveurbanenvironments AT izabelaburda walkabilityandfloodresiliencepublicspacedesigninclimatesensitiveurbanenvironments AT lucynanyka walkabilityandfloodresiliencepublicspacedesigninclimatesensitiveurbanenvironments |