New urban design resource focuses on children and caregivers, offering practical solutions and inspiration to make streets safer and more welcoming for all.
For Immediate Release | August 6, 2020
Contact : Annah MacKenzie | [email protected]
Media Kit Available here or here
The Global Designing Cities Initiative (GDCI), a program of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO), today launched Designing Streets for Kids—a supplement to NACTO-GDCI’s Global Street Design Guide (GSDG), which set a new global baseline for designing urban streets. Designing Streets for Kids builds upon the approach of putting people first, with a focus on the specific needs of babies, children, and their caregivers as pedestrians, cyclists, and transit users in urban streets around the world.
“If you design a street that works for kids, you’ve designed a street that works for everyone,” said Janette Sadik-Khan, NACTO and GDCI Chair and Principal with Bloomberg Associates. ” Designing Streets for Kids shows how cities can lead by design to improve the quality of life for people everywhere.”
Most streets were not built with children in mind, and current street conditions in many places are unwelcoming and unsafe for kids. Traffic crashes kill 1.35 million people every year and they are the leading cause of death for young people ages 5-29. Traffic congestion and vehicle designs can also contribute to dangerously high levels of air pollution, which is responsible for the death of 127,000 children under the age of five each year. Many of these fatalities are preventable, and these numbers can be dramatically reduced through kid-friendly street design.
Poor street design also has negative consequences for children’s physical and mental health. Streets that are noisy and/or hostile to pedestrians and transit users tend to discourage physical activity, which deprives children of independent mobility and opportunities to exercise and play.
Offering detailed diagrams and rich graphics, Designing Streets for Kids captures best practices, strategies, programs, and policies used globally by cities from Bogotá to Moscow. The guide pays special attention to street redesigns in key places, such as schools and neighborhood streets, as well as high-traffic areas including commercial streets and intersections. With a dedicated chapter on “How to Make Change Happen,” the guide also shows how to implement and scale-up street redesign plans, highlighting tactics to engage children throughout the planning process—an often-overlooked approach that can dramatically transform how streets are designed and used.
“While urban design challenges affect all children, they are especially stark for children in low-income and historically underserved communities,” said Skye Duncan, Director of NACTO-GDCI. “Reliable mobility options and access to safe, healthy streets is a human right, and Designing Streets for Kids provides actionable strategies for ensuring equitable access to these vital public spaces.”
“Children are the most vulnerable people on city streets, and their safety should come first,” said Michael Bloomberg, Founder of Bloomberg Philanthropies and Former Mayor of the City of New York. “But until recently, streets were designed around automobiles—not people. We’ve begun to change that, and it’s saving a lot of lives. This guide will help more cities take action, and make their streets safer and better for residents of all ages.”
“With the widespread closures of schools, daycare centers, and playgrounds due to the COVID-19 pandemic, cities are being challenged to think differently about how play, learning, and social connection can continue to occur for children and young people,” said Susanna Hausmann-Muela, Chief Program Officer at Fondation Botnar. “Fondation Botnar is committed to supporting the health and wellbeing of children in growing urban environments, and we are proud to support NACTO-GDCI in their ongoing efforts to ensure that children everywhere have the space they need to explore, connect, and move safely around their environment—even in the face of crisis.”
“When we take into account the experience of babies, toddlers, and their caregivers in the planning and design of cities, we can better meet the needs of all residents and users of public space,” said Cecilia Vaca Jones, Executive Director of the Bernard van Leer Foundation. “Designing Streets for Kids empowers leaders and communities to consider their city from the eyes of a child, filling a critical gap in urban design thinking and guidance.”
“Every child should have the right to use safe roads, to breathe clean air, and to engage with and participate in the decisions that will impact their future,” said Saul Billingsley, Executive Director of the FIA Foundation. “Cities committed to better environments for their children to play, learn, and live can use this new resource to implement child-friendly urban design. Designing Streets for Kids has the potential for universal application to build better urban spaces for all.”
“Streets designed for the safety of children aren’t just safer, they are the foundation of a city with less driving, less traffic, and less pollution,” said Gonzalo Duran Baronti, Mayor of Independencia, Santiago de Chile, Chile. “This guide lays the groundwork for all street users to have healthier, happier lives.”
“Urban design is the most important thing we can do to make streets safer for everyone,” said Roberto Claudio, Mayor of Fortaleza, Brazil. “Using the design principles in Designing Streets for Kids, we can start today by building streets from a child’s perspective.”
“Communities and schools across Africa are in desperate need of advice and support to redesign their streets to protect children and young people, said Zoleka Mandela, Global Ambassador of Child Health Initiative. “For the continent with the highest per capita, and growing, toll of death and injury on the roads for children, this guide can be a catalyst for real change.”
“For too long, cities have ignored children’s needs and wishes, and allowed the car to reign supreme. The climate crisis, an epidemic of inactivity, and environmental degradation all add to the case for change,” said Tim Gill, Author of No Fear and International Expert on Childhood Development. “Designing Streets for Kids is a timely, comprehensive guide to creating safe, sociable streets and neighborhoods, making cities more sustainable and livable for everyone.”
NACTO-GDCI’s Streets for Kids program is generously supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Bernard Van Leer Foundation, the FIA Foundation, and Fondation Botnar. As part of the Streets for Kids program, many of the global principles outlined in Designing Streets for Kids are already being applied and implemented in the cities of Tirana (AL), Santiago (CL), Kigali (RW), and Fortaleza (BR). In New York, NACTO-GDCI also supports the Fresh Air Fund’s Summer Spaces program, which uses the design principles outlined in Designing Streets for Kids to turn closed streets and open spaces into age-appropriate play spaces that employ social distancing measures—a model that can be replicated across New York City and beyond.
Designing Streets for Kids is available for purchase from Island Press and can be viewed and downloaded for free at GlobalDesigningCities.org.
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About the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)
NACTO is an association of 86 major North American cities and transit agencies formed to exchange transportation ideas, insights, and practices and cooperatively approach national transportation issues. The organization’s mission is to build cities as places for people, with safe, sustainable, accessible, and equitable transportation choices that support a strong economy and vibrant quality of life. To learn more, visit nacto.org or follow us on Twitter at @NACTO.
About the NACTO Global Designing Cities Initiative (GDCI)
Launched in 2014 as a program of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO), the Global Designing Cities Initiative focuses on transforming streets to inspire safe, sustainable, and healthy cities. GDCI’s work is informed by the strategies and international best practices captured in the Global Street Design Guide. To learn more, visit globaldesigningcities.org or follow us on Twitter at @globalstreets.