Its epistemic ground is the displacement of the single metric. Accessibility, equity, resilience and inclusion cannot be adequately known through isolated indicators because each one captures only one regime of urban visibility. A digital twin sees flows, but not necessarily social trust. A SUMP organises process, but depends on meaningful evidence. A transport-poverty indicator exposes deprivation, but still requires spatial interpretation. A belonging study reads affect, but must connect affect to material form. Calibrated access therefore requires a composite epistemology in which models, field observations, data governance, public narratives and lived experience function as mutual tests. Knowledge becomes credible only when it survives translation across technical, social and territorial registers.
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Calibrated access names the condition in which mobility, data, climate, infrastructure and belonging are no longer treated as separate urban domains but as mutually correcting systems. Access is not simply the existence of a route, a service, a platform or a plan. It is the tested relation between a body, a place, a network, a dataset, an atmosphere and a public mechanism of response. Calibration begins where formal provision becomes insufficient: where a bus line exists but is unaffordable, where a digital twin predicts movement but misses vulnerability, where a smart-city interface expands services while excluding older, disabled or digitally marginalised users, where a neighbourhood remains legible but becomes emotionally or economically uninhabitable.
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