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• The Atlantic Cities SEP 16, 2013 <br />How to Design a City for Women <br />http : / /www.theatlanticcities.com / commute / 2013 /09 /how - design- city- women /6739/ <br />• CLARE FORAN <br />In 1999, officials in Vienna, Austria, asked residents of the city's ninth district how often and why <br />they used public transportation. "Most of the men filled out the questionnaire in less than five <br />minutes," says Ursula Bauer, one of the city administrators tasked with carrying out the survey. "But <br />the women couldn't stop writing." <br />The majority of men reported using either a car or public transit twice a day -- to go to work in the <br />morning and come home at night. Women, on the other hand, used the city's network of sidewalks, <br />bus routes, subway lines and streetcars more frequently and for a myriad reasons. <br />"The women had a much more varied pattern of movement," Bauer recalls. "They were writing <br />things like, 'I take my kids to the doctor some mornings, then bring them to school before I go to <br />work. Later, I help my mother buy groceries and bring my kids home on the metro. "' <br />Women used public transit more often and made more trips on foot than men. They were also more <br />likely to split their time between work and family commitments like taking care of children and <br />elderly parents. Recognizing this, city planners drafted a plan to improve pedestrian mobility and <br />access to public transit. <br />Additional lighting was added to make walking at night safer for women. Sidewalks were widened <br />so pedestrians could navigate narrow streets. And a massive staircase with a ramp running through <br />the middle was installed near a major intersection to make crossing easier for people with strollers <br />and individuals using a walker or a wheelchair. <br />The barrier free staircase in Vienna's ninth district. (Image courtesy flickr user: Josef Lex) <br />