Explorative pedestrian mobility GPS data from a citizen science experiment in a neighbourhood
Pedestrian GPS data are key to a better understanding of micro-mobility and micro-behaviour within a neighbourhood. These data can bring new insights into walkability and livability in the context of urban sustainability. However, pedestrian open data are scarce and often lack a context for their tr...
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Zusammenfassung: | Pedestrian GPS data are key to a better understanding of micro-mobility and
micro-behaviour within a neighbourhood. These data can bring new insights into
walkability and livability in the context of urban sustainability. However,
pedestrian open data are scarce and often lack a context for their
transformation into actionable knowledge in a neighbourhood. Citizen science
and public involvement practices are powerful instruments for obtaining these
data and take a community-centred placemaking approach. The study shares some
3000 GPS recordings corresponding to 19 unique trajectories made and recorded
by groups of participants from three distinct communities in a relatively small
neighbourhood. The groups explored the neighbourhood through a number of tasks
and chose different places to stop and perform various social and festive
activities. The study shares not only raw data but also processed records with
specific filtering and processing to facilitate and accelerate data usage.
Citizen science practices and the data-collection protocols involved are
reported in order to offer a complete perspective of the research undertaken
jointly with an assessment of how community-centred placemaking and operative
mapping are incorporated into local urban transformation actions. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.08672 |