Darío Hidalgo Guerrero🇨🇴
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dhidalgo65.bsky.social
Darío Hidalgo Guerrero🇨🇴
@dhidalgo65.bsky.social

Investigador y practicante de la movilidad sostenible
Profesor de Transporte y Logística @unijaveriana
Consejo Directivo RAM y PANAMSTR
#PeatoCicloBusiCableMetroDotista
🚶🏻‍♀️🚴🏻‍♂️🚌🚠🚈🏙

Engineering 62%
Public Health 9%
Pinned
Starting a nerdy thread with academic publications on sustainable mobility, road safety 🙋🏻‍♂️
Comments appreciated

With Ricardo Giesen & Juan Carlos Muñoz 🇨🇱 (2024)
Bus Rapid Transit: End of trend in Latin America?
Data & Policy, Open Access 😁
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
Bus Rapid Transit: End of trend in Latin America? | Data & Policy | Cambridge Core
Bus Rapid Transit: End of trend in Latin America? - Volume 6
www.cambridge.org

Jakob Allansson, Joel Hansson, Fredrik Pettersson-Lafstedt,
Developing a BRT planning tool for small and medium-sized cities,
European Transport Studies,
Volume 2,
2025,
100045,

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Developing a BRT planning tool for small and medium-sized cities
Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) has predominantly been implemented in major urban areas worldwide, but interest is growing in its application within small and…
www.sciencedirect.com

New report
Rivas et al. (2025) Inter-American Development Bank
Public Transport share is declining in cities in the LAC region in favor of motorcycle and car use
Finance is key for improving quality
scholar.google.com/scholar_url?...

Case study of Transit Oriented Development TOD in Ningbo, China
Innovative institutional hybrid public–private partnership (PPP)
The PPP-driven TOD was of mutual benefit to both private developers and municipal government
Lin et al. (2025) Transpormetrica B
www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Transit-oriented development and land value capture in China: a public–private partnership perspective
Transit-oriented development (TOD) has become a central strategy of local governments to reshape land-use planning and spatial structure. However, cooperations on effectively implementing TOD betwe...
www.tandfonline.com

Motorcyclists are the fastest-growing road user group in Latin America; account 1/4 of all road traffic collision deaths
A new study by #Salurbal @drexeluniversity.bsky.social
U Lanús, @uniandes.bsky.social + shows the connection with the built environment in 377 cities
drexel.edu/lac/media/ne...
New Study Links City Design to Motorcyclist Deaths in 337 Cities in Latin America - Salud Urbana en América Latina (SALURBAL) Project
drexel.edu

J.A. Bonilla,
Transition to sustainable public transport in Latin America: Evidence from Bogotá,
Transportation Research Part D: Transport & Environment
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
SITP reduced pollution by 21 µg/m3 and increased life expectancy by 1.4 years
@elsevierconnect.bsky.social
Transition to sustainable public transport in Latin America: Evidence from Bogotá
This study examines Bogotá’s transition to sustainable transport through its integrated public transit system. In 2012, over a decade after introducin…
www.sciencedirect.com

Light Rail CVLR +48% higher total lifecycle GHG emissions compared to BRT CGB
Also +21% higher operational emissions
Our new findings exhibit that BRT system is more cost- & carbon-effective
Case study UK @unibirmingham.bsky.social
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
@elsevierconnect.bsky.social
The American centrist punditocracy has decided that what the US transit industry needs are endless lectures about the importance of security.

These writers misunderstand the problem, and are making things worse. 1/

www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archiv...
The Other Reason Americans Don’t Use Mass Transit
People will take buses and trains only if they feel safe while riding them.
www.theatlantic.com
🎉 Happy 100th birthday to transportation research at UCLA! 100 years ago today, the UC regents voted to establish the nation's first research center dedicated to street traffic issues. Learn more about our century-long tradition of transportation research www.its.ucla.edu/100...

"Imagine if people said, ‘Okay, now you can pick what time you want to arrive [at work] between 7 a.m. and 11 a.m., then based on the time you arrive, this is when you end [your work day]”
@penalosag.bsky.social

Shalaby says we can change our relationship with driving by implementing congestion charges, which are fees imposed on drivers to enter a designated area during peak hours.
@uoftcities.bsky.social
NEW: “Toderian says it’s easy to be distracted by futuristic innovations like electric cars, drone delivery networks & hyperloops. ‘The real solutions are a lot less sexy and a lot more common sense… Tech won’t save us if we get the fundamentals wrong.”

I was 1 of 3 urban experts asked to weigh in.
A world without traffic? Three urban experts rethink how cities move
Gridlock is costing us billions, but bold solutions like bus-only lanes, congestion charges and flexible work hours could get cities moving again
www.theglobeandmail.com

Reposted by Darío Hidalgo

Here's the elevated parkway on an old viaduct that spans over a mile of the city.

City-level interventions that improve street connectivity, promote safer and more cohesive urban environments, and address social inequities in infrastructure and services may help reduce motorcycle deaths and enhance road safety in the region

doi.org/10.1186/s406...
@springer.springernature.com
Built and social environment characteristics associated with motorcyclist mortality in Latin American cities from the SALURBAL study - Injury Epidemiology
Background Motorcyclists are the fastest growing road user group in Latin America, and account for 25% of all road traffic collision deaths. This study examines the relationship between motorcyclist mortality and the built and social urban environment in Latin American cities. Methods We studied 337 cities with ≥ 100,000 inhabitants in seven Latin American countries. Mortality data from 2010 to 2019 were obtained from civil registries and linked to cities defined by the SALURBAL project. Motorcyclist deaths were identified using ICD-10 codes, with redistribution of ill-defined codes. City-level measures included population, urban development, street design, public transportation, and social environment. Associations were estimated using multilevel negative binomial models. A subanalysis of 300 cities with motorcycle registration data was conducted. Results The crude city-level motorcyclist mortality rate was 4.16 per 100,000 population. Age-standardized rates varied from 0.51 to 22.60. Males had higher mortality rates, with the highest rates in 20-24-year-olds. After adjustment, cities with higher population density (RR 0.92 [95% CI 0.85–1.00]), intersection density (RR 0.91 [95% CI 0.83–0.99]), and social environment index (RR 0.88 [95% CI 0.83–0.93]) had lower motorcyclist mortality. More curvilinear street layout (RR 0.97 [95% CI 0.90,1.03]) and the presence of public transportation (RR 0.94 [95% CI 0.87,1.03]) showed a non-significant association with mortality. Higher urban development isolation (RR 1.07 [95% CI 1.00–1.14]) was associated with higher mortality, but the association weakened after adjustment. In cities with motorcycle registration data, higher rates of registered motorcycles were associated with higher motorcyclist mortality. Conclusion Motorcyclist road traffic deaths in Latin American cities are associated with specific city-level characteristics. In fully adjusted models, higher intersection density and a stronger social environment index were linked to lower mortality rates. City-level interventions that improve street connectivity, promote safer and more cohesive urban environments, and address social inequities in infrastructure and services may help reduce motorcycle deaths and enhance road safety in the region.
doi.org

Cities with higher population density, intersection density and social environment index had lower motorcyclist mortality. More curvilinear street layout and the presence of public transportation showed a non-significant association with mortality

The crude city-level motorcyclist mortality rate was 4.16 per 100,000 population. Age-standardized rates varied from 0.51 to 22.60. Males had higher mortality rates, with the highest rates in 20-24-year-olds.
Yannone et al. (2025)
Colombia 8.6 motorcycle deaths per 100,000 people (2.63 F, 14.89 M)

Yannone, I.J., Alazraqui, M., Rodriguez Hernandez, J.L. et al. Built and social environment characteristics associated with motorcyclist mortality in Latin American cities from the SALURBAL study. Inj. Epidemiol. 12, 61 (2025)
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
@springer.springernature.com
Built and social environment characteristics associated with motorcyclist mortality in Latin American cities from the SALURBAL study - Injury Epidemiology
Background Motorcyclists are the fastest growing road user group in Latin America, and account for 25% of all road traffic collision deaths. This study examines the relationship between motorcyclist mortality and the built and social urban environment in Latin American cities. Methods We studied 337 cities with ≥ 100,000 inhabitants in seven Latin American countries. Mortality data from 2010 to 2019 were obtained from civil registries and linked to cities defined by the SALURBAL project. Motorcyclist deaths were identified using ICD-10 codes, with redistribution of ill-defined codes. City-level measures included population, urban development, street design, public transportation, and social environment. Associations were estimated using multilevel negative binomial models. A subanalysis of 300 cities with motorcycle registration data was conducted. Results The crude city-level motorcyclist mortality rate was 4.16 per 100,000 population. Age-standardized rates varied from 0.51 to 22.60. Males had higher mortality rates, with the highest rates in 20-24-year-olds. After adjustment, cities with higher population density (RR 0.92 [95% CI 0.85–1.00]), intersection density (RR 0.91 [95% CI 0.83–0.99]), and social environment index (RR 0.88 [95% CI 0.83–0.93]) had lower motorcyclist mortality. More curvilinear street layout (RR 0.97 [95% CI 0.90,1.03]) and the presence of public transportation (RR 0.94 [95% CI 0.87,1.03]) showed a non-significant association with mortality. Higher urban development isolation (RR 1.07 [95% CI 1.00–1.14]) was associated with higher mortality, but the association weakened after adjustment. In cities with motorcycle registration data, higher rates of registered motorcycles were associated with higher motorcyclist mortality. Conclusion Motorcyclist road traffic deaths in Latin American cities are associated with specific city-level characteristics. In fully adjusted models, higher intersection density and a stronger social environment index were linked to lower mortality rates. City-level interventions that improve street connectivity, promote safer and more cohesive urban environments, and address social inequities in infrastructure and services may help reduce motorcycle deaths and enhance road safety in the region.
link.springer.com

Bogotá's pedestrian and transit mall on a Sunday afternoon
Very livable space

Manizales 🇨🇴 opens L3 of its cable car 🚠
Other cities in Colombia using gondolas for public transport: Medellín, Cali, Bogotá, Pereira

Thanks @brenttoderian.bsky.social for your new list of urbanists around the world

Greetings from Bogotá

Thanks a lot for this list
NEW STARTER PACK! This time I’m hoping to encourage and support global urbanists from OUTSIDE North America here on Bluesky, so hopefully this will help! Who’ve I missed? Just joined? Let me know! I’ll keep updating, so please keep checking & sharing this pack! And let’s try using #GlobalUrbanists.
Urbanists OUTSIDE North America Worth Following!
Join the conversation
go.bsky.app

Reposted by Darío Hidalgo

Bologna lowered its speed limit to 30 km/h (19 mph). Italy’s right-wing government declared war.

In Bloomberg, I explored how street safety became a political issue in Europe, much like in the US. 🧵

www.bloomberg.com/news/feature...

Bogotá🇨🇴 is getting its first metro line
The first train arrived from China 🚈
Fully automated
Six cars, 1800 passengers per train
26 trains per hour (up to 40 in the long term)
Scheduled operation in March 2028

117/n
Urban math
By Mark Beown AICP

youtu.be/1zmaPqy-QkM?...
Conversation at the 20th anniversary of Transforming Transportation
@wrirosscities.bsky.social
World Bank
Nancy Kete, founder of Embarq
#TTDC23
Celebrating 20 Years of Transforming Transportation | #TTDC23
YouTube video by WRI Ross Center for Sustainable Cities
youtu.be

Some remarks on energy and resilience by Dr. Nancy Kete in 2014
C3E Women in Clean Energy Symposium @ MIT
youtu.be/PyKGzpBLp8k?...
Remarks on Cities and Resilience - Nancy Kete
YouTube video by MIT Energy Initiative
youtu.be

Nancy Kete
Rest in peace
Great leader in air quality policy, pioneer in climate change, founder of Embarq @ @worldresources.bsky.social
Member of @rockefellerfdn.bsky.social
Thanks for your legacy

Public Transportation Governance Types: An Analytical Framework for Examining Bus Services in the Global South
Ivan Souza Vieira
Urban Affairs Review
journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Public Transportation Governance Types: An Analytical Framework for Examining Bus Services in the Global South - Ivan Souza Vieira, 2025
Public transportation shapes urban residents’ access to economic opportunities, public services, and full citizenship. Its significance is particularly evident ...
journals.sagepub.com

Closing the implementation gap in urban climate policy: Mexico’s public transit buildup
Nicholas Goedeking @idos-research.bsky.social

Interesting combination of top-down and bottom-up project preparation and finance, Protram-Fonadin BRT Program in 8 cities

www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
Closing the implementation gap in urban climate policy: Mexico’s public transit buildup
This paper examines the political conditions conductive to closing the structural implementation gap in urban climate policy, conceptualized as a policy adoption gap and a policy outcome gap. I arg...
www.tandfonline.com

Reposted by Darío Hidalgo

Don Guillermo Cano cumpliría hoy 100 años. El Cartel de Medellín lo mató cuando tenía 61 y llevaba 34 como director de
@elespectador.com. Hoy escribí sobre él: un referente digno, valiente y honesto en esta época tan llena de influencers y luminarias. www.elespectador.com/opinion/colu...
Don Guillermo Cano para “dummies”
“No le escribo a don Guillermo, pero sí a los jóvenes con la ilusión de convertirse en periodistas”: Adriana Villegas Botero
www.elespectador.com