The End of Driving: Automated Cars, Sharing vs Owning, and the Future of Mobility, second edition, examines the complex intersection of vehicle automation, public policy, and social change. It analyzes two competing models for the deployment of driving automation-privately owned, automated, or highly automated vehicles versus on-demand driverless vehicles (robotaxis)-and argues that while robotaxis could offer superior urban mobility, achieving this outcome requires deliberate policy choices. Drawing from early deployments through 2025, this book explores how automated vehicles could advance public interests, including social equity, environmental sustainability, and urban liveability; but only with thoughtful system design and implementation.
This thoroughly updated second edition examines the psychological factors influencing transportation choices that will make private vehicle ownership persist; explores the challenges of roads where human drivers and self-driving vehicles will operate simultaneously; and proposes innovative approaches like flexible on-demand transit and targeted financial incentives to encourage shared mobility. This book introduces new concepts, like zero-car-ownership communities, and changes to urban design centered on access to automated transportation.
Instead of forecasting specific timelines for automated-driving milestones, this book engages in 'backcasting', identifying how to achieve a desirable future. The End of Driving: Automated Cars, Sharing vs Owning, and the Future of Mobility makes a compelling case that while private vehicle ownership is likely to remain dominant, a transportation system with greater shared mobility is still possible and preferable. Achieving it, however, will require strategic policy interventions to overcome deeply ingrained behavioral patterns and market forces that favor ownership.
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Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
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ISBN-13
978-0-443-22392-1 (9780443223921)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Bern Grush is a transportation demand management and geographic systems entrepreneur, consultant, speaker, and writer. Co-Founder of Grush Niles Strategic, Bern develops patents and technologies for autonomous road tolling and autonomous parking, is a contributing author to Disrupting Mobility: Impacts of Sharing Economy and Innovative Transportation on Cities (Springer, 2017), and holds degrees in Human Factors and Systems Design Engineering from the University of Toronto. John Niles researches, designs, plans, and evaluates transportation improvement policies and actions. He is a Research Associate with the Mineta Transportation Institute at San Jose State University, Executive Director of the Center for Advanced Transportation and Energy Solutions in Seattle, and Co-Founder of both the Grush Niles Strategic and Global Telematics consultancies. He holds degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Carnegie Mellon University. Andrew Miller, PhD is a speaker, writer, and consultant. He has 20 years of experience spanning academia; Canadian government at the municipal and provincial levels; and private-sector advisory. He also served as the Toronto mobility lead for Sidewalk Labs, Google's smart-city firm, designing innovative transport systems, including infrastructure for automated driving. Andrew has served as an invited expert on automated driving, and the future of mobility generally, to global audiences, including the leadership of General Motors; of Woven, Toyota's future-mobility arm; and the Senate of Canada. He also sits on the boards of a variety of for-profit and not-for-profit organizations that aim to improve mobility networks in the greater Toronto area. He holds advanced degrees from Yale and Johns Hopkins Universities.
Autor*in
Founder, Urban Robotics Foundation, Canada
Center for Advanced Transportation and Energy Solutions, Seattle, WA, USA
Speaker, Writer, Consultant, Toronto, ON, Canada
1. Language for Automated Driving
2. The Road Taken: Hype, Inflated Expectations, Disillusionment, and Reset
3. A Broad Context: The Contention of Change
4. Conflicting Narratives: Shared Understanding Will Be Difficult to Achieve
5. A Challenging Transition: Two Competing Markets
6. The Road Ahead Wherever Private Ownership Thrives
7. Barriers to Shared Use of Vehicles
8. Surviving Mixed Traffic
9. Microtransit and Shared Robotaxis in Merged Evolution
10. Governing Multiple Fleets of Automated Vehicles
11. Transit-Oriented Development and Other Land Use
12. Realistic Scenario End States for SAV Deployment
13. Backcasting for the Steps to Achieve Desired Futures
14. Summary of the Behavioral Economics Overlay
15. Zero Car Ownership Communities