Operationalising the ‘Movement and Place’ framework: from functional to configurational street types in urban design and planning practice
Journal article, 2026

Street design guidelines aim to balance the two dimensions of streets, as movement corridors and as public places. The widely adopted Movement and Place framework seeks to integrate these dimensions but overlooks the configurational and multiscalar nature of streets. Drawing on space syntax and the theory of natural movement, this paper extends the framework by defining street types through network centrality: closeness (place) and betweenness (movement). Gothenburg is used as case study to demonstrate how this approach addresses these two gaps, resolving transport-oriented biases to support pedestrian-oriented street design, particularly in early planning stages and in data-scarce urban contexts.

networkcentrality

Street design guidelines

pedestrian movement

Movement and Placeframework

configurational street types

Author

Evgeniya Bobkova

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Urban Design and Planning

Meta Berghauser Pont

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Urban Design and Planning

Ioanna Stavroulaki

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Urban Design and Planning

Planning Practice and Research

0269-7459 (ISSN) 1360-0583 (eISSN)

1-24

Towards a holistic street design. Showcasing integration potentials of urban design and traffic engineering guidelines in relation to the sustainable development agenda.

Chalmers Area of Advance Transport, 2022-06-01 -- 2024-06-01.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Human Geography

Architecture

Architectural Engineering

Roots

Basic sciences

DOI

10.1080/02697459.2026.2675643

More information

Created

6/1/2026 1