Men are often overrepresented in consultations about how city facilities are built. To account for this, planners need to seek out women's comments and look for ways to better serve them, argues Alexander Starritt.
Men and women have different needs when it comes to city facilities. A recent piece by Alexander Starritt in Fast Co.Exist describes how a survey of Viennese transit riders revealed starkly different responses between genders. Staritt writes that cities have opportunities to serve their women who get forgotten when men are the default. "The crux is the consultation process—actually asking people how they live and then building the city to fit," Staritt says.
Among the strategies cities have used some concern safety, "Toronto has made a 'request stop system,' so women (and men, for that matter) can get off buses closer to their homes late at night," Starritt reports. "Several places, from Srinigar in Kashmir to Mexico City, have created women-only buses and subway cars," the article points out. There are also ways in which cities can better accommodate child care, which is more likely to be a concern for women than men.
FULL STORY: Women And Men Use Cities Very Differently
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City of Costa Mesa
Licking County
Barrett Planning Group LLC
HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research
Mpact Transit + Community
HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research
Tufts University, Department of Urban and Environmental Policy & Planning
City of Universal City TX
ULI Northwest Arkansas
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