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Feature

Kim Dirks: A multidisciplinary look at sustainable infrastructure

02 June 2021
Getting urban infrastructure right is key to more widespread sustainable transport choices.

In many ways, driving is the unhealthiest way of commuting. Itā€™s sedentary, while even taking public transit requires people to walk, sometimes run, to the nearest stop. Itā€™s bad for the planet. But ironically, compared to people cycling, walking or e-scootering along the same busy roads, drivers are somewhat protected from the large amount of emissions their cars produce. Something needs to be done about that, says Associate Professor  of the University of Auckland.

Dirks is a member of the Department of , but she got there through a circuitous route. Originally trained in physics and meteorology, she focused on air pollution modelling for her PhD. Then she took a job at the University of Aucklandā€™s Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences and turned to researching the population health impacts of air pollution.

The more Dirks learned, the more she realised the important role urban infrastructure plays.

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Kim Dirks

ā€œYou can measure and model air pollution concentrations at particular points in a city, but what does that actually mean for individuals as they go about their daily routines?ā€ says Dirks. ā€œPeople spend time inside, outside, commuting, engaging in sport. The urban infrastructure influences how people spend their time and move about. At a medical faculty, I was able to come up with ways to improve peopleā€™s health, but it was much more difficult to influence the decisions being made about the provision of infrastructure.ā€

When the opportunity arose for Dirks to join the Faculty of Engineering despite not being an engineer ā€“ she does have a solid quantitative background ā€“ she took the opportunity to continue her multidisciplinary work in a place where there was a greater chance of being able to influence change.

Nudging people into active transportation

The thing about air pollution is that itā€™s very localised. If one side of a road is bumper-to-bumper, simply crossing the street to the less congested side can lower your exposure. Barriers also help. In a study Dirks undertook that had cyclists riding down a bike path next to a motorway, pollution exposure was found to reduce significantly where there were fences, trees or hedges separating the motorway and the cycleway.

Pollution exposure, however, is far from the only consideration for people making choices about transportation. Safety is also an important factor. If the less busy side of a road has more intersections, poor visibility or a lack of sidewalks, pedestrians arenā€™t going to choose it even if air quality is better. Safety is an especially important concern when choosing walk-to-school routes for children.

Safety concerns are also a major factor holding back more people from cycling. Where there are no bike lanes, cyclists have to share space with cars. Even where there are painted cycle lanes, drivers often park in them, sometimes opening car doors into cyclists. Dedicated and separated lanes go a long way in improving safety and thereby encouraging people to cycle or use e-scooters, skateboards and the like, says Dirks.

Cars sitting in traffic

Dirks speaks from personal experience. Since the new cycleway along Tamaki Drive was completed, she has started cycling it almost daily even though itā€™s longer than the more direct on-road route. The safer route, however, is only part of what is making it easier for her to cycle. The other factor is her new e-bike.

Dirks, who runs regularly, is fit. However, the e-bike has made it easier for her to cycle farther and faster without getting too sweaty, while still getting a fair amount of exercise. She knows, though, that the initial cost of an e-bike is a barrier to some.

ā€œThe more people cycle, the less people drive, which reduces congestion. Reduced congestion improves air quality and road safety, which can encourage people to cycle more. Itā€™s a virtuous circle.ā€

Kim Dirks

A multidimensional study

With some of her students, Dirks is now running a survey on the enablers and barriers to cycling in Auckland, especially in relation to the provision of infrastructure.

She and her students will compare their results to findings from a similar survey conducted by a colleague 10 years ago. They expect the comparison to reveal changes to attitudes and infrastructure, as well as developments such as increased use of e-bikes.

They hope to present their findings to ŠÓ°ÉAPPCouncil, because councillors are the ones who can make policy decision that nudge people out of their cars.

ā€œThe more people cycle, the less people drive, which reduces congestion,ā€ says Dirks.

ā€œReduced congestion improves air quality and road safety, which can encourage people to cycle more. Itā€™s a virtuous circle.ā€

Dirks also aims to build software that will help people optimise their transportation choices by asking them about their lives and what they value ā€“ for example, are they short on time? Short on money? Do they have health issues? These and other factors can affect their transportation choices.

ā€œYou have to weigh up different factors given your personal circumstances and values, and make some compromises, but in the end there will be optimal and less optimal choices,ā€ says Dirks.

Bringing together disciplines

Dirksā€™ research also considers the links between health and infrastructure in dimensions other than transportation.

For example, sheā€™s examining how to densify cities, which can reduce commuting distances and infrastructure costs, while still providing quality access to green space, which she says has environmental and health benefits so marked that simply providing nature views from hospital rooms can speed recovery.

Because her research is so multidisciplinary, Dirks is ideally placed to bring people together to examine urban infrastructure from all angles.

So, with , who is Watercare Chair in Infrastructure, sheā€™s doing just that.

The tentatively named Infrastructure Research Initiative involves nearly 100 researchers, with a steering committee consisting of one representative from each University of ŠÓ°ÉAPPfaculty. Though still in its formative stages, the group aims to address infrastructure issues, particularly related to sustainability, from a multidisciplinary point of view. In addition to pursuing researcher-driven projects, it aims to respond to government and industry needs. 

ā€œUltimately, weā€™d like to be a voice through which people can get input from University of ŠÓ°ÉAPPexperts on matters related to infrastructure,ā€ says Dirks. ā€œWeā€™re a linking entity, because you canā€™t look at infrastructure from just one angle. You have to consider safety, environment, health, equity, law, cost, culture, aesthetics and so much more. We want to design cities that are healthy in all of these dimensions.ā€

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