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<p class=MsoNormal><span style='color:black'>From <a
href="http://www.worldstreets.org/">World Streets</a> today:</span><br>
<br>
<br>
<o:p></o:p></p>

<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='text-align:right'>- Chris Bradshaw,
Ottawa, Canada<o:p></o:p></p>

<p class=MsoNormal><br>
The real efficiency in transportation will come from social innovations, or
should I say, return to social practices.<br>
<br>
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</v:shape><![endif]--><![if !vml]><a
href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_kbTo-M_pSuw/SjpaPU-hOZI/AAAAAAAAA7g/w8Wc1fATcYo/s1600-h/ws-bradshaw.jpg"><img
border=0 width=112 height=145 src="cid:image001.jpg@01C9F0BB.D6F0DDB0"
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title="" v:shapes="Picture_x0020_10"></a><![endif]>As a former <span
class=blsp-spelling-error>carshare</span> provider, I consider sharing to be
mankind's oldest technology. &quot;Technology?&quot; Yes, because it takes some
invention to get it to work so that it is sustainable -- so that it doesn't
self-destruct.<br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>When sharing occurs on a small scale -- within the family
or between neighbours and friends -- it needs little technology other than
people being kind and attentive to a small number of others. Simple individual
memory keeps track of favour and payback. Many cars are shared on this informal
scale.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>When it occurs at a larger scale, more formality is
necessary. And there is a role for electronic/communications technology and
formality of roles. Who owns the cars? Who makes sure they are roadworthy? Who
makes sure each user pays his rightful share of the common costs? Who decides
whether rules on access are being followed.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>More complicated? Yes, but also more flexible and more
powerfully efficient. The informal method can only handle maybe three drivers,
and what happens when two of them want the vehicle for the same time slot?</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>Formal sharing can handle the 20-60 users that currently
is the rule, and that is for a boutique market that hasn't yet led to land-use
reforms that will squeeze out distance for all people's trips. It is also
before we get advanced </span><span class=blsp-spelling-error>carsharing</span><span
class=fullpost> in which several members going the same way </span><span
class=blsp-spelling-corrected>simultaneously</span><span class=fullpost> can
share (trans-seat,' see next), and at the destination, the car is released for
another route and driver, rather than sitting idle, thanks to each leg of the
trip being separately reserved.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>Our suburbs and our competitive consumption patterns
(&quot;I have more/better 'stuff' that you.&quot;) have done a great deal to
make sharing a dirty word.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>People have been coached by champions of consumer growth
to protect their privacy, no matter how lonely that makes them. And how
expensive it is to acquire so much stuff, most of which is not the right model
for the buyer, is under-utilized, and is ineptly maintained? People drive cars
alone not just because they want fast, no -wait transportation; they also are
buying privacy (and if many other people are seeking the same on the same
section of road at the same time, the no-wait criterion will vanish). Many,
much of the time, don't even want to share a ('their') car with other members
of the household.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>But we are seeing with the </span><span
class=blsp-spelling-error>internet</span><span class=fullpost> that people who
are guarded in their dealings with neighbours and friends are quite open with
complete strangers in the anonymous world of the </span><span
class=blsp-spelling-error>internet</span><span class=fullpost>. Formal </span><span
class=blsp-spelling-error>carsharing</span><span class=fullpost> uses this
propensity to provide essentially anonymous sharing, mediated by a computer and
its service organization. My concept of transit, which I have dubbed
&quot;trans-seat,&quot; uses shared vehicles to allow this sharing to expand
from consecutive to simultaneous, but without the </span><span
class=blsp-spelling-error>ridesharing</span><span class=fullpost> experience
which tries to create an instant community, but soon becomes 4-7 people plugged
into personal MP3 players and phones.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>It seems that people are more keen on being open to
strangers when they aren 't trapped into a repetitive situation. This is the
market which &quot;trans-seat&quot; will try to tap, making it a kind of
sharing between </span><span class=blsp-spelling-error>ridesharing</span><span
class=fullpost> and transit. With each seat accessible to the outside via its
own door, there will not be any need for sharing physical space inside the
vehicle. There will also be no &quot;standing&quot; area -- either you have a
seat or you are not a passenger (no second-class patrons).</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>Reservations will also be possible, so that a trip across
town via several vehicles, for a small fee, can be seat-guaranteed (including a
bicycle seat) for each 'leg' of the trip.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>The 'trans-seat' vehicle's driver, another member going
somewhere, but who meets higher driver standards, will get a break on his
travel fees for doing the extra chore of piloting (although not going off his
route, as those accessing a seat will walk to a 'pod' -- pedestrian-oriented
depot -- on the nearest arterial on their own (taxis and valet </span><span
class=blsp-spelling-error>carsharing</span><span class=fullpost>/rental will
still do the door-to-door thing).</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>These are some of the elements of sharing in transportation
that I have been thinking about. They are all intended to squeeze out all the
extra metal and space that are not productive. That re-establishes walking as
the primary mode for neighbourhoods, transit and 'trans-seat' for
inter-neighbourhood travel in cities, and common-carriers (bus, train, boat,
plane) for the rarer long trips.</span><br>
<br>
<span class=fullpost>There won't be much room for the personal car, except in
museums. If we get it right, people will find more freedom and enough privacy
to make them wonder what was it they saw in having, maintaining, storing, and
earning money to transform public thoroughfares and semi-public parking lots
into private spaces, especially when they have to pay the piper for the
privilege.</span><span class=fullpost><o:p></o:p></span></p>

<p class=MsoNormal><b><span style='font-family:"Arial","sans-serif"'>About the
author:</span></b><span style='font-family:"Arial","sans-serif"'> Chris retired
from city &amp; regional planning in 1996, and co-founded Ottawa's <span
class=blsp-spelling-error>carsharing</span> company, <span
class=blsp-spelling-error>Vrtucar</span> in 2000. He has been an advocate for
walking and pedestrian rights for 30 years. In retirement, he is championing a
society-wide transition to a second-generation version of <span
class=blsp-spelling-error>carsharing</span> (integrating car-sharing, taxis, <span
class=blsp-spelling-error>ridesharing</span>, car-rental, and delivery). He
lives 'car-lite' in downtown Ottawa with his wife of 40 years.</span><span
style='font-family:"Arial","sans-serif"'><o:p></o:p></span></p>

<p class=MsoNormal><br>
<br>
<br>
--<br>
Posted By Eric Britton to <a
href="http://newmobilityagenda.blogspot.com/2009/06/drive-train-technology-vs-new-mobility.html">World
Streets</a> at 6/19/2009 05:34:00 AM<o:p></o:p></p>

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