| Qualification Type: | PhD |
|---|---|
| Location: | Devon, Exeter |
| Funding for: | UK Students, EU Students, International Students, Self-funded Students |
| Funding amount: | Full tuition fees, stipend of £21,805 per annum, travel funds of up to £15,000, and RTSG of £10,715 are available over the 3.5 year studentship |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Placed On: | 31st March 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 24th April 2026 |
| Reference: | 5842 |
Project Description
Chrono-urbanism is an urban planning approach that prioritises time as a core resource, aiming to reduce travel time by placing essential services, leisure, and work within a short walk or bike ride. This approach seeks to create sustainable and healthy cities through “urban villages.” It provides the theoretical framework for concepts like the 15-minute city, which defines a 15-minute limit for a “short walk or bike ride.” While this idea is appealing at first sight, it raises several problems.
This project will empirically test both assumptions to develop a more nuanced, evidence-based framework linking chrono-urban accessibility to health and socioeconomic outcomes. It will:
The project involves six cities: London and Exeter in the UK, Brisbane and Melbourne in Australia, and São Paulo and Fortaleza in Brazil. These case studies cover diverse urban sizes, forms, wealth levels, and health profiles. The project uses spatial analysis and GIS, including network-based walkability modelling with OpenStreetMap, large-scale human mobility analysis with anonymised Call Detail Records and geolocated social media data, and computational techniques from network science and machine learning. It is interdisciplinary, combining theories of healthy and accessible cities with computational data science, network science, and spatial analytics.
Contact
Questions about this project should be directed to Professor Ronaldo Menezes at R.Menezes@exeter.ac.uk
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