Daniel Romm
@daniel-romm.bsky.social
86 followers 110 following 17 posts
Doctoral Researcher at the Platial Analysis Lab (https://platial.science/) in McGill | GIS, GIScience, Transportation, Maps, Urban Analysis, Etc.
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Reposted by Daniel Romm
lanrickbennett.bsky.social
Really enjoy working on @uoftcities.bsky.social projects like this.

Heavy lifting by @jamaps.bsky.social with data analysis & visualization. Also Mia Wang who’s led data collection and GIS data processing.

Who are streets for?

h/t @daniel-romm.bsky.social @ohtheurbanity.bsky.social #IdeasAtWork
uoftcities.bsky.social
The distribution of public land in cities has serious implications for how we move, how safe we feel, and who can access opportunities. @lanrickbennett.bsky.social + our data viz team find that 80% of T.O. street space is dedicated to motor vehicles:
Who are streets for?
More than 80% of street space in Toronto is inequitably dedicated to motor vehicles. How can this be fairly re-designed?
schoolofcities.github.io
daniel-romm.bsky.social
I reiterate our findings on space allocation in the roadway (97.7% cars : 2.3% bikes), the street (79.6% cars : 18.8% sidewalks : 1.6% bikes), the disparity between space and mode share, and our finding that more bike infrastructure is correlated with decreased rates of crashes involving cyclists.
Reposted by Daniel Romm
lanrickbennett.bsky.social
Happy to have @daniel-romm.bsky.social stop by the @uoftcities.bsky.social offices this afternoon to chat in between his well deserved media interviews.

Tagging some friends @davidzipper.bsky.social @thewaroncars.bsky.social @nerd4cities.bsky.social I think will be interested in Daniel’s work.
Two people standing in front of a door that reads

“University of Toronto School of Cities”
daniel-romm.bsky.social
Clearly communicating about street space is evidently important in understanding cities. I appreciate Metro Morning providing the opportunity to talk over this topic in another urban context. We would love to extend this analysis to other Canadian cities.

The article: doi.org/10.1016/j.jc...

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The cars are going to be alright: Examining micromobility infrastructure space allocation and potential improvement scenarios in Montréal
Many cities today are redesigning their streetscapes to redress the historical privilege afforded to the automobile in planning and policy. Much stree…
www.sciencedirect.com
daniel-romm.bsky.social
This morning CBC Metro Morning had me on to talk about our recent study "The Cars are Going to be Alright", and how it is relevant for Toronto. You can listen here: www.cbc.ca/listen/live-....

For a post explaining the main findings: platial.science/new-pub-the-...

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© CBC/Radio-Canada 2025. All rights reserved.
www.cbc.ca
daniel-romm.bsky.social
Hopefully we'll have the opportunity soon, we'd like to see how the numbers change with updated data. Thank you for your interest!
daniel-romm.bsky.social
The disparity between the proportion of trips by cyclists, and the proportion of space given to their infrastructure, relative to cars, seems to be especially resonant, so I threw together this map based on the study's data for another form of illustration (though, see the maps in the study).

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daniel-romm.bsky.social
We found that in Montréal, streets are overwhelmingly allocated to cars, at the expense of cyclists' space (97.7% to 2.3%). This is true even in boroughs we tend to think of as cycling friendly. In the Plateau, 22% of trips are cycling trips, but they only have 4.7% of the roadway.

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daniel-romm.bsky.social
All this to say, one of our main goals for this study was to communicate clearly about street space - and it seems that our framing strongly resonates.

Street space frames our experience of the city. It matters deeply to people; no wonder there's so much passion here, for better or for worse.

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daniel-romm.bsky.social
Happy to see media and popular interest around our recent article "The Cars are Going to be Alright" (platial.science/new-pub-the-...). We've been featured on CBC, Radio Noon, Daybreak, Le Devoir, Radio Canada, CTV, Global, CityNews, and more to come. A lot of engagement on social media too.

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The Cars are Going to be Alright
In a new publication, Daniel Romm and co-authors demonstrate how reallocating Montréal’s street space can create more equitable infrastructure...
platial.science
daniel-romm.bsky.social
Street space is overwhelmingly allocated to car infrastructure, yet any efforts to reallocate space to other transport modes is hotly contested. Turns out, even with radical proposals to increase micromobility infrastructure space, drivers need not worry – the cars are going to be alright.
daniel-romm.bsky.social
We also model scenarios: what if we doubled all the bike lanes in Montréal? Still, in no borough would cars have less than 90% of the road, space per driver would fall by just -0.154 sq. m/traveller, but micromobility area would increase to +4.447 sq. m/traveller.
daniel-romm.bsky.social
Boroughs with more cyclists have a worse ratio; in Plateau, drivers have 3.36 sq. m/traveller, compared to 1.51 sq. m/traveller for cyclists. We present several measures for communicating this inequality in street space allocation, look at spatial distribution, relationship to socio-demographics...
daniel-romm.bsky.social
We measure how street space is divided between transport infrastructure in Montréal. Between cars and micromobility, cars are given 97.68% of space to micromobility's 2.32%; per traveller, cars are given 5.8 sq. m/traveller to micromobility's 4.54 sq. m/traveller.
daniel-romm.bsky.social
New paper out, open access in the Journal of Cycling and Micromobility Research: "The Cars are Going to be Alright: Examining Micromobility Infrastructure Space Allocation and Potential Improvement Scenarios in Montréal" (doi.org/10.1016/j.jc...).
Redirecting
doi.org