Staff Profiles

Dr. Keone Kelobonye

Keone Kelobonye

Faculty of Engineering and Technology

Architecture and Planning

Head of Department

Location: 248/131
Phone: 355 2985/5201
Email Dr. Keone Kelobonye

PhD.| Spatial Sciences: Metropolitan Transport Planning (Curtin University, Australia)

MSc.| Geospatial Science (Curtin University, Australia)

M.A. (Prof) | Planning Policy and Strategy (University of Botswana)

BSc.| Urban and Regional Planning (University of Botswana)

Dr. Keone Kelobonye is a Senior Lecturer of GIS, Urban & Transportation Planning at University of Botswana (UB), and is currently the acting Head of the Department of Architecture and Planning. He is a certified Urban and Transport Planner and researcher, registered with the Department of Town and Country Planning in Botswana. His professional memberships also include the Pula Institute of Town Planners (BW) and the American Association of Geographers (USA). Dr Kelobonye holds BSc and MA Prof. degrees in Urban & Regional Planning from UB, and Master of Science and Doctoral degrees from Curtin University, Australia.

Keone's research interests lie at the nexus of Metropolitan Transportation Planning and Sustainable Urban Development, with some of his recent and current works focusing on transit planning and performance evaluation, spatial equity of accessibility, commuter behaviour analysis, and travel efficiency optimisation using Urban Informatics and Big Data Analytics. Keone is an early career researcher (ECR) with a record of publications in international journals of Transport Planning, Land Use Planning and Geoinformatics. 

Geographic Information Systems

Planning Support Systems

Urban & Regional Economics

Planning for Climate Change

Planning Policy & Administration

Digital Cartography

Spatial Modelling

Transportation research

Geospatial intelligence, urban spatial structure, urban geo-informatics, metropolitan transport planning, transport geography, accessibility, spatial equity, travel efficiency, transport policy, travel behaviour, travel mode choice.

  • Geographic Information Systems for Transportation (GIS-T)
  • Commuting patterns, behaviour and mode choice;
  • Trip generation, attraction and management;
  • Transport infrastructure and facility planning;
  • Spatial equity of urban facilities and services;
  • Accessibility evaluation and optimisation in metropolitan areas;
  • Efficient and sustainable travel through urban design and functionality.

 

Zhang, B., Dong, Y., Kelobonye, K., Zhou, RZ., & Xu, Z. (2023). Delineating walking catchments of existing and proposed public sports facilities with open-source data: a case study of Nanjing. Applied spatial analysis and policy, 16 (2), 729-749

Kelobonye, K., Zhou, H., Xia, J., & McCarney, G. (2021). Effective density vs. accessibility: Which model to apply in the evaluation and prioritisation of activity centres? Applied Geography, 128, 102390.

Kelobonye, K., Zhou, H., McCarney, G., & Xia, J. (2020). Measuring the accessibility and spatial equity of urban services under competition using the cumulative opportunities measure. Journal of Transport Geography, 85, 102706.

Kelobonye, K., McCarney, G., Xia, J., Swapan, M. S. H., Mao, F., & Zhou, H. (2019). Relative accessibility analysis for key land uses: A spatial equity perspective. Journal of Transport Geography, 75, 82-93.

More on: Google Scholar, ResearchGate, ORCID

In pursuit of academic excellence