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Posted: 2017-12-22 05:14:54

Posted December 22, 2017 16:14:54

As emergency services rushed to help after a vehicle was driven into pedestrians on Flinders Street in Melbourne, Associate Professor Douglas Tomkin — an expert on how to make pedestrians safer in exactly these situations — passed by in a bus.

His first thought was: "Oh no. Not again."

The latest attack, which Victorian police say was not terror-related, underscores the need for new ways to design city features to reduce risk when these incidents occur, he said.

Designing out crime

Professor Tomkin and his team at the Designing Out Crime Research Centre at UTS have been working with NSW Police on finding ways to improve city design to make people safer in a world where any vehicle could be used in a deliberate attack on pedestrians.

"NSW Police have just been conducting some experiments in very similar circumstances, driving an SUV travelling at 80 kilometres an hour into bollards," he said. Other tests will follow.

Professor Tomkin says:

"There are lots of different ways to make cities safer in these situations. It's dependent on the context, these lot of things you can do at some places that you can't at other places. If you were planning this at the street level, you might have chicanes, which require vehicles to turn corners and deliberately slows them down. There are ways in which you can take pedestrians off dangerous corners but still make it convenient for them."

Some of these design features are detailed in the Safe Places — Vehicle Management report Professor Tomkin and the team at Designing Out Crime Research Centre helped develop in partnership with the NSW police.

More attacks will likely follow

The Flinders Street incident is unlikely to be the last, Professor Tomkin says:

"It's just dreadful that these sorts of things end up prompting other people to think 'I can do the same'. To be honest, the thing concerning a lot of us at the moment is New Year's Eve and times when you get people massing in certain areas. If you have any incident which even can cause panic and get people running all over the place, it gets more difficult to control in those circumstances."

We need to change how we design cities

Dr Pernille Christensen, a senior lecturer at UTS, is conducting research into the role that built environment plays in protecting crowded places.

Chicanes, steep verges, bollards, decorative planters, bus shelters, signs, statues, water features, and high kerbs are all examples of design features that can be used to slow down an oncoming vehicle or absorb impact so a human is not the first thing it hits.

Dr Christensen says:

"We're talking to everybody from architects, urban designers and landscape architects on one end of the spectrum to property management, developers, investors and construction professionals at the other end.

"We want to achieve an integrated design where security features are considered in the design, planning and pre-construction development stages, rather than being considered as an afterthought. This way, people don't necessarily say, 'Oh that's here to protect me' but see the solution as just a nice feature of the space. So people feel safe, without feeling afraid.

"The trend is toward low sophistication attacks with vehicles and easily accessible weapons. As long as this continues to be the case, we need to think about how to protect our crowded places against this strategy. At the same time, we need to make sure our spaces are adaptable, because the mode of attack is always changing and we need to be one step ahead."

Douglas Tomkin is Development Director for the Designing Out Crime Research Centre at University of Technology Sydney. Pernille Christensen is a Senior Lecturer in Property Economics and Development at the University of Sydney.

This article was written by Sunanda Creagh, Head of Digital Storytelling at The Conversation, and Jordan Fermanis, Editorial Intern.

Originally published in The Conversation.

Topics: crime, disasters-and-accidents, industrial-design, melbourne-3000, australia

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