RMIT University
Browse

How important is the land use mix measure in understanding walking behaviour? Results from the RESIDE study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:57 authored by Hayley Christian, Fiona Bull, Nicholas Middleton, Matthew Knuiman, Mark Divitini, Paula Hooper, Anura Amarasinghe, Billie Giles-CortiBillie Giles-Corti
Background: Understanding the relationship between urban design and physical activity is a high priority. Different representations of land use diversity may impact the association between neighbourhood design and specific walking behaviours. This study examined different entropy based computations of land use mix (LUM) used in the development of walkability indices (WIs) and their association with walking behaviour.Methods: Participants in the RESIDential Environments project (RESIDE) self-reported mins/week of recreational, transport and total walking using the Neighbourhood Physical Activity Questionnaire (n = 1798). Land use categories were incrementally added to test five different LUM models to identify the strongest associations with recreational, transport and total walking. Logistic regression was used to analyse associations between WIs and walking behaviour using three cut points: any (> 0 mins), ≥ 60 mins and ≥ 150 mins walking/week.Results: Participants in high (vs. low) walkable neighbourhoods reported up to almost twice the amount of walking, irrespective of the LUM measure used. However, different computations of LUM were found to be relevant for different types and amounts of walking (i.e., > 0, ≥ 60 or ≥ 150 mins/week). Transport walking (≥ 60 mins/week) had the strongest and most significant association (OR = 2.24; 95% CI:1.58-3.18) with the WI when the LUM included 'residential', 'retail', 'office', 'health, welfare and community', and 'entertainment, culture and recreation'. However, any (> 0 mins/week) recreational walking was more strongly associated with the WI (OR = 1.36; 95% CI:1.04-1.78) when land use categories included 'public open space', 'sporting infrastructure' and 'primary and rural' land uses. The observed associations were generally stronger for ≥ 60 mins/week compared with > 0 mins/week of transport walking and total walking but this relationship was not seen for recreational walking.Conc

History

Journal

International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity

Volume

8

Number

55

Start page

1

End page

12

Total pages

12

Publisher

BioMed Central

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 The Authors

Former Identifier

2006070604

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-02-14