Tweet Chat Recap: Unlocking the Grid
April 23, 2015 — Blog
We can’t assume that infrastructure or cars will be the same in the future, but we need to work towards a healthy #sustainable commute – Charbel Aoun, Senior Vice President – Smart Cities at Schneider Electric, @CJAoun
Cities around the world are either praised or criticized for their traffic management and transport solutions. Catch our April Tweet chat highlights on urban mobility and the topical transport challenges facing cities today.
Unlocking the Grid: Tweet Chat Highlights
What key transport areas need to be targeted to unlock gridlock?
On key streets more people are in mass transit than personal cars. Protected lanes for these vehicles can help improve cities. @Bridj
Good quality bus transport systems, priority for pedestrians and cyclists will ease traffic and improve travel time for commuters. @EMBARQIndia
In London, Stockholm, Milan, traffic decreased by 20% in target area following introduction of congestion charging scheme. @jp_uitp
Which cities are leading the way in multimodal transport?
In Zurich 34 percent of trips on foot or by bike; can get anywhere without a car. We can learn from this. @CJAoun
#London‘s @TfL and #Singapore’s @LTAsg ensure seamless #integration across the metro, buses, light rail, and taxis. @EMBARQIndia
Integrated mobility pioneer #Hannover offers one-stop-shop application with e-ticketing and multimodal trip planning. @jp_uitp
Which tech solutions are revolutionizing traffic management?
Tech solutions incl: open fare transit systems, smrt parking & innovative payment solutions. http://on.citi.us/127sEBb#CitiforCities. @Citi
The coolest & applicable tech is when people can get an accurate notification when the next bus come. Simple, cheap & useful. @elisa_jkt
Tracking speeds in real time, for example by sampling Bluetooth in many locations has improved management in Mass and elsewhere. @Bridj
The coolest will be once we can start rerouting people and traffic around real time information. Waze is a good start. @Placemeter
Should inner city transport become a free urban service?
Higher frequencies rather than lower fares drive shift from private cars to public transport http://bit.ly/1CN4QSL. @jp_uitp
It doesn’t has to be free. The important is that urban service is reliable and help to transport people conveniently and safely. @WidyDen
We’re not sure about free per se but inner city transport should be accessible to all citizens of a city. @Placemeter
Will going car free be an advantage for cities in the future?
India’s car-free movement has seen great potential in improving quality of life @raahgiriday@EqualStreets. @EMBARQIndia
Cleaner, healthier, safer. Urban planners are recognising that streets should be designed for people, not cars. @blazefeed
Cities that can be navigated car-free are more accessible & cost-efficient for citizens/businesses. Healthier too! #CitiforCities. @Citi
Cities can benefit for car-free policy applied on specific districts, such as heritage district. @elisa_jkt
Will driverless cars make city transport safer?
Cars – driverless, electric, hybrid – are still cars and not particularly sustainable. @EMBARQIndia
More reliable in spotting and responding to a bike or pedestrian, although poses questions about sedentariness. @blazefeed
Featured Guests Included:
- Charbel Aoun, Senior Vice President – Smart Cities at Schneider Electric, @CJAoun
- Citi, New York, @Citi
- Elisa Sutanudjaja, UNESCO Program Officer and Founder of the Rujak Centre of Urban Studies, @elisa_jkt
- Bridj, Boston, @Bridj
- Divya Kottadiel, Editor of TheCityFix, @EMBARQIndia
- Susan Zielinski, Managing Director of the SMART-initiative, University of Michigan, @SMARTatUMich
- Jérôme Pourbaix, Head of Policy & Outreach at UITP, @jp_uitp
- GEPI, Global Entrepreneurs Program Indonesia, @GEPIndonesia
- Widya Anggraini, urb.im Jakarta Community Manager, @WidyDen
- Blaze, London, @blazefeed
- Placemeter, New York City, @Placemeter
- Alix Armour, Co-founder, Nimble Scooters, @Aliks
Thank you!
Thanks to all of our featured guests, and to the many others that joined in on Twitter. We hope you’ll join us again for our next Tweet chat session. For a full view of the conversation, check out our post on Storify.
To find out more about the New Cities Summit, visit newcitiessummit2015.org and follow #ncs2015 on Twitter.