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The End of Traffic and the Future of Access: Roadmap to the New Transport Landscape

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In this book we propose the welcome notion that traffic—as most people have come to know it—is ending and why. We depict a transport context in most communities where new opportunities are created by the collision of slow, medium, and fast moving technologies. We then unfold a framework to think more broadly about concepts of transport and accessibility. In this framework, transport systems are being augmented with a range of information technologies; it invokes fresh flows of goods and information. We discuss large scale trends that are revolutionizing the transport landscape: electrification, automation, the sharing economy, and big data. Based on all of this, the final chapters offer strategies to shape the future of infrastructure needs and priorities.

We aim for a quick read—and to encourage you and other readers to think outside your immediate realm. By the end of this book (today, if you so choose) you will appreciate the changing times in which you live. You will hopefully appreciate what is new about transport discussions and how definitions of accessibility are being reframed. You will be provided with new ways of thinking about the planning of transport infrastructure that coincide with this changing landscape. Even if transport is not your bailiwick, we like to think there is something interesting for you here. We aim to share new perspectives and reframe debates about the future of transport in cities.

425 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 18, 2015

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David M. Levinson

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949 reviews9 followers
March 1, 2016
Good quick overview of possible future options for urban transportation, but their discussion is based upon assumption that per capita vehicle trips are continuing to go down, but instead are beginning to go back up, or at least, are stabilizing. Still, go overview of transportation alternatives.
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