Street design and driving behavior: evidence from a large-scale study in Milan, Amsterdam, and Dubai
Giacomo Orsi, Titus Venverloo, Andrea La Grotteria, Umberto Fugiglando, F\'abio Duarte, Paolo Santi, Carlo Ratti

TL;DR
This study uses computer vision and machine learning to analyze how street design influences driver speed compliance across Milan, Amsterdam, and Dubai, providing actionable insights for urban planning to enhance road safety.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework combining semantic segmentation and machine learning to assess street design impact on driving behavior across diverse urban contexts.
Findings
Narrower streets and dense environments correlate with lower speeds.
Greater visibility and sky views are associated with higher speeds.
The predictive model estimates speed compliance under different urban design scenarios.
Abstract
In recent years, cities have increasingly reduced speed limits from 50 km/h to 30 km/h to enhance road safety, reduce noise pollution, and promote sustainable modes of transportation. However, achieving compliance with these new limits remains a key challenge for urban planners. This study investigates drivers' compliance with the 30 km/h speed limit in Milan and examines how street characteristics influence driving behavior. Our findings suggest that the mere introduction of lower speed limits is not sufficient to reduce driving speeds effectively, highlighting the need to understand how street design can improve speed limit adherence. To comprehend this relationship, we apply computer vision-based semantic segmentation models to Google Street View images. A large-scale analysis reveals that narrower streets and densely built environments are associated with lower speeds, whereas roads…
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