A standardized, multidimensional transport score equips cities with actionable insights to improve mobility while reducing community harm, directly influencing investment priorities and policy outcomes.
The video announces the launch of PROIVE, a scientific scoring system designed to evaluate how well transport networks serve their surrounding communities. The creator frames the framework as a way to meet people across different locales while applying a data‑driven rubric to assess mobility.
PROIVE comprises five pillars: Permeability—how easily residents move within the area; Radial links—connections to the urban core; Orbital links—circuits that bypass the core; National connectivity—long‑distance links; Integration—coordination among transport services; and Violence—measuring the harm transport infrastructure inflicts on neighborhoods. Each component is intended to be quantified, offering a composite score that reflects overall transport health.
The presenter emphasizes the novelty of the model, noting it is “patent pending” and “copyright‑protected.” He walks through the acronym on the fly, highlighting that “PROIVE” literally stands for Permeability, Radial, Orbital, Integration, Violence, and long‑distance connectivity, underscoring the system’s comprehensive scope.
If adopted, PROIVE could give planners, policymakers, and community advocates a common language for comparing cities, prioritizing investments, and mitigating negative externalities such as traffic‑related injuries. Its data‑centric approach promises more transparent decision‑making and could foster cross‑regional benchmarking.
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