The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd

Buro Happold hosts active transport event at World Congress of Architecture in Copenhagen

The Department for Transport (DfT) is likely to miss the targets it has set itself for boosting walking and cycling
The finding comes from a damning National Audit Office (NAO) report
The report looked into how the DfT has spent more than £2bn in efforts to develop England's active travel infrastructure since 2016
The NAO suggested that patchy delivery and lack of appetite at local level were hampering active travel delivery

As part of the World Congress of Architecture in Copenhagen, Buro Happold will be hosting the one-hour walk and talk event through the city centre of Copenhagen to explore the challenges and solutions for active mobility planning.

Buro Happold’s global lead for active mobility, Sidsel Birk Hjuler, will be hosting the side event on why it is so important to create more liveable places by making active mobility an integral part of projects for cities and regions, in Europe and around the world.

Join the walk at Lille Langebro on July 4, from 5.30-6.30pm after securing your free ticket here.

The Buro Happold initiative comes as the UK’s Department for Transport (DfT) has been identified as being is likely to miss the targets it has set itself for boosting walking and cycling.

The finding comes from a damning report from the UK's National Audit Office (NAO), which looked into how the DfT has spent more than £2bn in efforts to develop England's active travel infrastructure since 2016.

As part of the investment, it established Active Travel England to address longstanding issues relating to the standard of infrastructure and to support improvements in the capability of local authorities.

However, according to the NAO, the £2bn investment – which is expected to deliver around £6.6bn of active travel interventions between 2016 and 2025 – will not meet DfT's own four objectives and targets.

These objectives, set in 2016, are:

• Increasing the percentage of short journeys in towns and cities that are walked or cycled from 41 per cent in 2018-19 to 46 per cent in 2025

• Increasing walking activity to 365 stages per person per year in 2025

• Doubling cycling from 0.8 billion stages in 2013 to 1.6 billion in 2025

• Increasing the percentage of children aged 5-10 walking to school from 49 per cent in 2014 to 55 per cent in 2025

In its report, NAO says: "Although active travel schemes have the potential to deliver important benefits, in practice DfT has known too little about what has been achieved and has not been able to influence the local delivery of schemes consistently.

"This has led to patchy delivery of active travel schemes and it’s unlikely that DfT’s objectives for increased active travel by 2025 will be achieved."

The NAO also suggested that local authorities have little appetite in driving active travel projects.

"DfT does not yet know if the schemes delivered by local authorities to date have been of good enough quality and does not have a plan in place to track the benefits of its active travel investment," the NAO writes in its report.

"More than half (56 per cent) of local authorities – who play a significant role in delivering interventions – have low capability and ambition to deliver active travel projects, which has affected the quality of active travel interventions delivered with government funding to date."

There is, however, praise for Active Travel England.

"Active Travel England has the potential to be a catalyst for increasing walking, wheeling and cycling," the report reads.

"It has made good early progress and is well-placed to address many of the issues that can lead to poor quality active travel schemes.

"Maintaining this early momentum from the set-up of Active Travel England will be important to securing the benefits for transport, health and the environment and achieving value for money from government’s investment in active travel."

The NAO's finding echo those of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Speaking to CLAD's sister title, HCM, recently, Dr Fiona Bull, head of the WHO Physical Activity Unit, said walking and cycling are not receiving the support they need from governments: "We need all ministries of transport to appreciate their contribution to increasing physical activity through walking and cycling," said Bull. "They are the responsible government portfolio sector for this.

"We must also address data gaps," she said. "Data will inform, guide and allow us to measure progress, yet there are some key indicator gaps that mean we don’t even know what progress we’re making – or not making. For example, we don’t know what provision and access there is to walking and cycling infrastructure, either, so we can’t track that or guide progress... and if we say we’re going to ... increase walking and cycling infrastructure, the budgets within those government portfolios must match the policy directions. At the moment, we have a mismatch in many countries."

To read the full National Audit Office report, click here.

The Department for Transport  DfT  National Audit Office  NAO  walking  cycling 
Related stories
21 Mar 2023

'More productive and happier' – Kim Leadbeater calls for transformation in UK wellbeing policy

24 Feb 2023

WHO report shows increasing activity levels could save Europe €14bn in health costs by 2050

05 Oct 2022

Healthy cities conference to discuss diversity and inclusivity in urban planning and design

22 Aug 2022

Walking and cycling will now be available on prescription in parts of the UK

As part of the World Congress of Architecture in Copenhagen, Buro Happold will be hosting the one-hour walk and talk event through the city centre of Copenhagen to explore the challenges and solutions for active mobility planning. Buro Happold’s global lead for active mobility, Sidsel Birk Hjuler, will be hosting the side event on why it is so important to create more liveable places by making active mobility an integral
CLD,HAF,FIT,IND,RES,PUB
The NAO says local authorities are failing to deliver active travel projects / ShutterstockSampajano_Anizza
More news
News stories: 1 - 30 of 7782     
 
 
 
News stories: 1 - 30 of 7782     
 
 
 
company profile
Company profile: Curry Spa Consulting
Curry Spa Consulting has been providing clients in the high-end and luxury hospitality sector with spa design, programming, guidance and oversight since 2011.
Try cladmag for free!
Sign up with CLAD to receive our regular ezine, instant news alerts, free digital subscriptions to CLADweek, CLADmag and CLADbook and to request a free sample of the next issue of CLADmag.
sign up
features
The suite is made for parties, social gatherings and hosting private dinners
Joyce Wang’s Hong Kong and London practice has worked extensively with Mandarin Oriental
"Our brief was to create an exclusive suite dedicated to extravagant entertaining"

Designs the 'ultimate retreat for socialising'

Zumthor’s service buiding sits on the side of a stone wall
Peter Zumthor created three buildings at the site of the old Allmannajuvet zinc mines
"The designs portray the drudgery and strenuous nature of miners’ daily lives"

On his zinc mine museum in Norway

Kunsthaus Bregenz acts as a light box that absorbs and filters light throughout the building and glows at night
Peter Zumthor studied in Basel, Switzerland and New York. He launched his practice in Haldenstein in 1979
"I like to take my time"

The Pritzker Prize-winner on those LACMA renderings

Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
To advertise in our catalogue gallery: call +44(0)1462 431385
features
Last word: Tina Norden
Tina Norden
"We have created an approach which is playful, provocative but also functional"

Conran and Partners’ Tina Norden on playing with colour at Prague’s newly redesigned Hotel Maximilian

Sustainable projects include the University of Washington’s Life Sciences building and the Philips Academy, Snyder Centre
Din has worked on a range of sustainability-focused projects
"It’s imperative the architecture profession takes a proactive approach to tackling the realities of climate change"

Perkins+Will’s new sustainability director

The Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art features white, light-filled open spaces
Richard Meier received his architectural training at Cornell University and set up his practice in 1963
"Developers today have no incentive to create public space"

The American modernist architect on his latest project and his love of the colour white

features
"It empowers citizens to change their community with a bottom up approach - Harriet Gridley, Spacehive"

Crowdfunding can empower architects, but knowledge of the challenges is vital, finds Kath Hudson

The museum features 3,400 square metres of archaelogical gardens
Elizabeth de Portzamparc
"We need to stop the destruction of our world through predatory practices. We need to think of the future"

The architect behind Nimes’ Musée de la Romanité on designing to counter loneliness and the need for more cultural buildings

The BIG U high water barrier is 16km long, and incorporates community facilities
Kai-Uwe Bergmann
"BIG U is us starting the foundation work for a future resilient city."

The 'BIG culture ambassador' on the BIG U

cladkit product news
Codelocks develops new glass door smart lock
The new lock model allows facilities and building managers to create and manage access via an app or online portal
Megan Whitby
Codelocks has launched its first glass door smart lock to bring intelligent access control to modern spa, leisure, fitness and ...
Eco Resort Network conference to convene in Mauritius this May
The event will be hosted in the Mauritius in 2024
Megan Whitby
Hospitality industry event Eco Resort Network is set to take place at the Ravenala Attitude Hotel, Turtle Bay, Mauritius, from ...
Siminetti unveils iridescent decorative panelling range inspired by plants
The Clematis design
Megan Whitby
The Botanicals is Siminetti’s newest Mother of Pearl decorative panelling collection, inspired by the distinctive patterns found in botany and ...
cladkit product news
Eden project uses drones to spell out climate change warning
Magali Robathan
Almost 300 drones were used to signal an environmental message above the Eden Project’s biomes, during the UN Climate Change ...
Mather & Co and ITV unite to create Coronation Street Experience
Mather & Co has transformed the visitor centre into the ultimate haven for ardent Coronation Street viewers
Magali Robathan
Experience designers, Mather & Co, have orchestrated a remarkable collaboration with ITV to unveil the new Coronation Street Experience, a ...
Jaffe Holden helps bring Academy Museum of Motion Pictures alive
Jaffe Holden provided architectural acoustics for the Academy Museum
Magali Robathan
Acoustical consulting firm Jaffe Holden provided architectural acoustics and audio/video design services for the recently opened Academy Museum of Motion ...
cladkit product news
Alberto Apostoli and Newform collaborate to launch the A.Zeta showerhead
The showerhead offers two modes; rainfall or waterfall
Megan Whitby
Italian architect Alberto Apostoli has renewed his partnership with Newform – an Italian wellness company – and designed A.Zeta. A.Zeta ...
Koto Design introduces wood-fired hot tub
Koto is known for crafting modular, energy-neutral cabins and homes
Katie Barnes
A striking wood-fired hot tub has been unveiled by Koto, an architecture and design studio which has a passion for ...
Alberto Apostoli designs tech-forward Wellness Therapy furniture collection for Varaschin
The furniture collection draws on absolute geometries, pure lines, neutral colours and strong references to nature
Megan Whitby
Furniture manufacturer Varaschin has unveiled the new Wellness Therapy range, designed by Italian spa and wellness architect and designer Alberto ...
x
Sign up with CLAD for regular news updates
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd