Road lighting density and brightness linked with increased cycling rates after-dark

Jim Uttley, Steve Fotios, and Robin Lovelace (2020). Road lighting density and brightness linked with increased cycling rates after-dark. PLOS ONE. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233105
Authors

Jim Uttley

Steve Fotios

Robin Lovelace

Published

May 1, 2020

Doi
Abstract
Cycling has a range of benefits as is recognised by national and international policies aiming to increase cycling rates. Darkness acts as a barrier to people cycling, with fewer people cycling after-dark when seasonal and time-of-day factors are accounted for. This paper explores whether road lighting can reduce the negative impact of darkness on cycling rates. Changes in cycling rates between daylight and after-dark were quantified for 48 locations in Birmingham, United Kingdom, by calculating an odds ratio. These odds ratios were compared against two measures of road lighting at each location: 1) Density of road lighting lanterns; 2) Relative brightness as estimated from night-time aerial images. Locations with no road lighting showed a significantly greater reduction in cycling after-dark compared with locations that had some lighting. A nonlinear relationship was found between relative brightness at a location at night and the reduction in cyclists after-dark. Small initial increases in brightness resulted in large reductions in the difference between cyclist numbers in daylight and after-dark, but this effect reached a plateau as brightness increased. These results suggest only a minimal amount of lighting can promote cycling after-dark, making it an attractive mode of transport year-round.

Type: Journal Article Venue: PLOS ONE Year: 2020

DOI BibTeX

Abstract

Cycling has a range of benefits as is recognised by national and international policies aiming to increase cycling rates. Darkness acts as a barrier to people cycling, with fewer people cycling after-dark when seasonal and time-of-day factors are accounted for. This paper explores whether road lighting can reduce the negative impact of darkness on cycling rates. Changes in cycling rates between daylight and after-dark were quantified for 48 locations in Birmingham, United Kingdom, by calculating an odds ratio. These odds ratios were compared against two measures of road lighting at each location: 1) Density of road lighting lanterns; 2) Relative brightness as estimated from night-time aerial images. Locations with no road lighting showed a significantly greater reduction in cycling after-dark compared with locations that had some lighting. A nonlinear relationship was found between relative brightness at a location at night and the reduction in cyclists after-dark. Small initial increases in brightness resulted in large reductions in the difference between cyclist numbers in daylight and after-dark, but this effect reached a plateau as brightness increased. These results suggest only a minimal amount of lighting can promote cycling after-dark, making it an attractive mode of transport year-round.

Citation

Jim Uttley, Steve Fotios, and Robin Lovelace (2020). Road lighting density and brightness linked with increased cycling rates after-dark. PLOS ONE. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233105

BibTeX

@article{uttley_road_2020,
  title = {Road Lighting Density and Brightness Linked with Increased Cycling Rates After-Dark},
  author = {Uttley, Jim and Fotios, Steve and Lovelace, Robin},
  year = {2020},
  month = may,
  journal = {PLOS ONE},
  volume = {15},
  number = {5},
  pages = {e0233105},
  publisher = {{Public Library of Science}},
  issn = {1932-6203},
  doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0233105},
  urldate = {2020-05-22},
  abstract = {Cycling has a range of benefits as is recognised by national and international policies aiming to increase cycling rates. Darkness acts as a barrier to people cycling, with fewer people cycling after-dark when seasonal and time-of-day factors are accounted for. This paper explores whether road lighting can reduce the negative impact of darkness on cycling rates. Changes in cycling rates between daylight and after-dark were quantified for 48 locations in Birmingham, United Kingdom, by calculating an odds ratio. These odds ratios were compared against two measures of road lighting at each location: 1) Density of road lighting lanterns; 2) Relative brightness as estimated from night-time aerial images. Locations with no road lighting showed a significantly greater reduction in cycling after-dark compared with locations that had some lighting. A nonlinear relationship was found between relative brightness at a location at night and the reduction in cyclists after-dark. Small initial increases in brightness resulted in large reductions in the difference between cyclist numbers in daylight and after-dark, but this effect reached a plateau as brightness increased. These results suggest only a minimal amount of lighting can promote cycling after-dark, making it an attractive mode of transport year-round.},
  copyright = {CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication},
  langid = {english},
  keywords = {Artificial light,Daylight,Latitude,Light,Roads,Seasons,Sunset,Twilight},
  annotation = {ZSCC: 0000000},
  file = {/home/robin/Zotero/storage/IYA762HE/Uttley et al. - 2020 - Road lighting density and brightness linked with i.pdf;/home/robin/Zotero/storage/ANMDLPDY/article.html}
}

Notes