Mobility plays a fundamental role in modern cities. How citizens experience
the city, access its core services, and participate in city life, strongly
depends on its mobility organization and efficiency. The challenges that
municipalities face are very ambitious: on the one hand, administrators must
guarantee their citizens the right to mobility and to easily access local
services; on the other hand, they need to minimize the economic, social, and
environmental costs of the mobility system. Municipalities are increasingly
facing problems of traffic congestion, road safety, energy dependency and air
pollution, and therefore encouraging a shift towards sustainable mobility
habits based on active mobility is of central importance. Active modes, such as
cycling, should be particularly encouraged, especially for local recurrent
journeys (i.e., home-to-school, home-to-work). In this context, addressing and
mitigating commuter-generated traffic requires engaging public and private
stakeholders through innovative and collaborative approaches that focus not
only on supply (e.g., roads and vehicles) but also on transportation demand
management. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end solution for enabling urban
cyclability. It supports the companies' Mobility Managers (MMs) acting on the
promotion of active mobility for home-to-work commuting, helps the city
administrators to understand the needed urban planning interventions, and
motivates the citizens to sustainable mobility. To evaluate the effectiveness
of the proposed solution we developed two analyses: the first to accurately
analyze the user experience and any behaviour change related to the BIKE2WORK
initiative, and the second to demonstrate how exploiting the collected data we
can inform and possible guide the involved municipality (i.e., Ferrara, a city
in Northern Italy) in improving the urban cyclability.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure