RESEARCH

APPROACH

We began with problem areas related to mobility, access, and linkages between campus areas and proposed bus and rail transit routes.

  • Urban integration

  • Precinct identity

  • Boundary porosity and permeability

  • Space readability

  • Intuitive wayfinding and Navigation (especially how people build mental maps or “images” of an area)

FIELD RESEARCH

We investigated transit literacy, barriers, apprehensions, and alternative modes of transit/movement.

We conducted interviews, ride-a-longs, and co-designed journey maps to uncover mental models.

We photographed and videotaped commonly used streets at peak times to document migration routes.

We explored typical disruptions that occur, such as game day chaos, moving in/out of a residence, street repair, closures, and how students manage them.

KEY FINDINGS

DESIGN FACTORS

This framework is derived from our research findings and helps ATP project teams focus on important factors of mobility. Each of the factors plays a role in helping pedestrians build knowledge about how to get around campus and contributes to their sense of agency.

Accessibility

What methods of transportation are available to me? Can they get me to where I need?

Security

Are my options safe? If something happens, can I get some help?

Comfort

Are my options useful to me, and are they easy or enjoyable to use?

Identity

Is this a method I can identify with using?

Community

Will my social environment support my choice of transportation?

RESEARCH ASSETS

Journey Maps

User-generated mental models of their commute.

Survey Data

Graphs from the transit survey, Reddit post, and other quantitative data findings.

Quick Concepts

The original prototype ideations that later evolved into the deliverable concepts.

ACCESSIBILITY RESOURCES

An investigation into accessibility needs and perspectives at the University of Texas at Austin.

Click to read essay >

DIRTY MARTIN’S:
A THIRD PLACE PROFILE

An examination of a West Campus Institution at the University of Texas at Austin since 1926.

Click to read essay >