The Impact of Weather Conditions and Infrastructure Design on the Mobility of People with Impaired Vision
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Nineteen normally-sighted, low vision, and blind pedestrians provided self-reported effects of environmental, infrastructural, and social factors influencing outdoor mobility in the Minnesota’s Twin-Cities metropolitan area. Focus groups and interviews were conducted to gather data on challenges associated with year-round, independent outdoor navigation emphasizing winter pedestrian mobility. Study themes included weather pressures (e.g., precipitation, temperature), infrastructural/engineering features (e.g., street, sidewalk, intersection design and maintenance), and safety concerns related to motorists and obstacles. Results identify pedestrian hazard impacts on quality of life and behavioral adaptations visually-impaired pedestrians create to increase safety and efficiency during mobility. Conclusions prompt considerations for urban planners, engineers, community activists, and stakeholders concerning mobility issues for visually-impaired pedestrians. Recommendations are provided to promote equity and wellbeing in pedestrian mobility.
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University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. July 2019. Major: Design. Advisor: Gordon Legge. 1 computer file (PDF); viii, 104 pages.
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Achtemeier, Jacob. (2019). The Impact of Weather Conditions and Infrastructure Design on the Mobility of People with Impaired Vision. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/208914.
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