Efficient Cities of the Future
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The average American consumes more energy driving than operating their home. Efficient cities minimize the distance between {work, home, and activities}, cutting energy consumption and carbon dioxide production by more than half. Efficient cities provide the following benefits:
Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) technology is coming to
London Heathrow Airport in the Spring of 2009. When used as a transit circulator, PRT is
faster than a car for short trips, and makes traditional transit and carpooling
more effective by solving the “last mile problem.” Web and cell phones help
create a “comprehensive new mobility” system to make green transportation
seamless and hassle-free. Paid parking is the “stick” that reduces solo
commuting by 25%. “Low Miles residential communities” foster green culture,
where residents help each other to reduce carbon dioxide. This green
culture is created using the same powerful sociological marketing principles
that drive our materialistic society. Housing preference policies are used to
select new residents who will travel less and use green transportation. “Car
Reduction In-fill Bonus” is the real-estate engine used to fill in areas
previously considered built-out and to enable rapid spread of the more efficient
pattern. Through this simple step-by-step
plan, you'll save money, shed pounds, meet neighbors, hang out in in more lively
places, and pay lower taxes.
In 30 of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas, “regional visioning” exercises are underway. These exercises create
30-year regional plans. Almost uniformly, the regional visions forecast 50% population
growth, and, in the best scenario, a 40% increase in regional annual auto
driving. That’s not exactly an inspirational vision. We must do much better.
Planning on being alive in 2030? Don't miss this talk.
"Our current transportation policy path in the U. S. is clearly unsustainable. Traffic, its environmental impacts and its impact on quality of life continue to get worse virtually everywhere in the country. Innovative new ideas and new approaches are badly needed. We need a portfolio of innovative approaches spread across the United States, with each one pushing the envelope towards a more sustainable future transportation system. Cities21 and its Suburban Silver Bullet should be in this portfolio. It is innovative; it is forward-looking; it addresses many key transportation challenges; and the potential benefits - if widely disseminated - are large." - Steve Offutt: EPA Best Workplaces for Commuters
Speaker: Steve Raney is founder of Cities21.org, a nonprofit advanced transportation & smart growth think tank. He holds three masters: business, software, and transportation from Columbia, RPI, and Berkeley. He is the Principal Investigator for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s "Transforming Office Parks into Transit Villages" study of Pleasanton’s Hacienda Business Park (http://tod.hacienda.org/PRT/epa.htm ). He has conducted technology product research at Microsoft, Citigroup, and Silicon Valley start-ups. He was project manager for the Bay Area Rapid Transit system’s Group Rapid Transit study. He is the author of six Transportation Research Board (TRB) papers. His "wireless carpool assistant" is patented. His recent conference presentations include TRB, Rail~Volution, Greenbuild Expo, Association for Commuter Transportation, Going!, Engineers for a Sustainable World, Intelligent Transportation Systems World Congress, Environmental Protection Agency, American Planning Association (California Chapter), San Francisco Bay State of the Estuary Conference, Bay Area Transportation and Land Use Coalition, and Housing California. He served as Training Coordinator for Habitat for Humanity.
Efficient Cities vision paper: http://www.cities21.org/efficientSuburbs2020.htm .
San Francisco Chronicle, 5/27/06, "BUSINESS PARK 2.0 - Can sprawling office campuses become commute- cutting communities?."
Personal Rapid Transit for Microsoft Campus: http://www.cities21.org/Redmond.htm
Overall annual U.S. household energy consumption for "sprawling suburbia" to "green urban:" http://www.cities21.org/sprawlVSurban.gif.