Abstract

Due to significant changes in Cairo’s streets today, young children may face difficulties finding opportunities to be safe and active. They can encounter low independent mobility, limiting their access to places in their neighborhoods, and can have poor access to their schools. This study aims to examine governmental primary school children’s access to schools in their neighborhoods after street modifications in Heliopolis, Cairo, seeking to evaluate the potential risks to child pedestrians. This will subsequently aid in developing a methodology for consistently and fairly evaluating hazards along the route to schools. A survey of six governmental primary schools in Heliopolis, Cairo, was conducted through interviews with children and their parents. Furthermore, a behavioral map of the local neighborhood was completed by children (7–12 years old) of six primary schools from the areas surrounding their schools in which the modifications took place. The results indicate that the most common ways of travelling to school, according to the questionnaire, are either by public transportation (30%) or by a small van/private bus (42%). More than half of the children expressed their wish to walk or cycle to school. The result also found that 69% of the children expressed anxiety about crossing streets. In conclusion, for some children, opportunities to be active in the local neighborhood may be limited due to the new modifications to the streets, resulting in limited independent mobility. To promote a sense of neighborhood safety and increase access to neighborhood public spaces, it is important to work with urban planners and local governments.

Highlights

  • Egyptian cities are densifying at a rapid rate; this is especially the case in Cairo

  • To support decision-making, the tool provides a quantifiable framework for determining child pedestrian safety. Children and their parents answered a questionnaire about the level of independent mobility and the perception of safety in their primary school age children

  • Opinions today, after street modifications, most children were not allowed to do these things until around the age of 13, i.e., enrolled in the middle school. This is the case when it comes to cycling on busy streets, where the majority of children are not allowed to cycle until the age of 15

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Egyptian cities are densifying at a rapid rate; this is especially the case in Cairo. As these cities continue to densify to cope with the increase in population, open spaces become increasingly scarce [1]. The majority of children today are accompanied by adults to school, and only a small percentage of children walk or cycle to school on their own [2]. This is significantly different from how past generations of children used to play, where playing usually occurred in driveways, on streets, and in underutilized pockets of space throughout cities

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call