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The subject of this open-access publication is the impact of connected and automated vehicles on the European city and the conditions under which this technology can make a positive contribution to urban development. The authors put forward two theses that have received little attention in the scientific discourse so far: Connected and automated vehicles will not become fully established in all sub-areas of the city for a long time. As a result, previously assumed effects - from traffic safety to traffic performance as well as spatial effects - will have to be reevaluated.
To ensure a positive contribution of this technology to the mobility of the future, transport and settlement policy regulations must be further developed. Established territorial, institutional and organizational boundaries need to be challenged in a timely manner.
Despite or because of the existing great uncertainties, we are at the beginning of a phase of yet shaping the possible future - in technology development, but also in politics, urban planning, administration and civil society.
Description of the chapters:
1. Connected and automated driving: The long level 4
Mathias Mitteregger reflects on the road ahead for automated driving. What pathways of technological development induce which kind of spatial effects and planning needs?
2. Connected and automated driving: Consideration of the local, spatial context and spatial differentiation
3. Connected and automated driving in the context of a sustainable transport and mobility transformation
Andrea Stickler, Jens S. Dangschat and Ian Banerjee integrate possible potentials of automated mobility in the contextof a transformed, sustainable transport system.
PART I: Mobility and transport
4. Self-driving turnaround or automotive continuity? Reflections on technology, innovation and social change
Katharina Manderscheid reflects on how differing visions of an automated future can be understood with regard to divergent interests in technological development.
5. Automated drivability and streetscape compatibility in the urban-rural continuum using the example of Greater Vienna
6. Automation, public transport and Mobility as a Service: Experience from tests with automated shuttle buses
The authors show what types of automated public transport might be used in the future and what canbe learned from testing automated shuttle buses in the past.
7. Delivery robots as a solution for the last mile in the city?
PART II: Public space
8. Control and design of spatial mobility interfaces
9. Transformations of European public spaces with AVs
Robert Martin, Emilia M. Bruck and Aggelos Soteropoulos use the example of Copenhagen to show how public spaces could be transformed in an age of automated urban mobility and benefit from lower car dependency.
10. At the end of the road: Totalsafety
11. Integration of cycling into future urban transport structures with connected and automated vehicles
Looking at the future of mobility, Lutz Eichholz and Detlef Kurth show that the bike actually offers solutions to many of our current problems and that planning should not forget to integrate cycling into future urban transport structures and systems.
12. Against the driverless city
Part III: Spatial development
13. Strategic spatial planning, “smart shrinking” and the deployment of CAVs in rural Japan
14. Integrated strategic planning approaches to automated transport in the context of the mobility transformation
The authors show how new forms of automated mobility could be integrated into mobility systems in diverse spatial structures in the city region of Vienna with the overriding goal of the mobility transformation.
15. Opportunities from past mistakes: Land potential en route to an automated mobility system
Part IV: Governance
16. New governance concepts for digitalization: Challenges and potentials
17. How are automated vehicles driving spatial development in Switzerland?
Fabienne Perret and Christof Abegg show how automated vehicles are influencing spatial development in Switzerland, focusing on three different scenarios on the road ahead.
18. Lessons from local transport transition projects for connected and automated transport
19. Connected and automated transport in the socio-technical transition
Jens S. Dangschat looks at societal transformations in the past and contextualizes automated mobility in terms of a possible socio-technical transition ahead.
20. Data-driven urbanism, digital platforms and the planning of MaaS in times of deep uncertainty: What does it mean for CAVs?
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