Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm

Over the past decade, there has been rapid growth in the development and infusion of new and disruptive transportation. Some of the pivotal emergent technologies range from micro-mobility and bikeshare to ridesourcing that is set to utilize automated vehicles. This paper introduces and defines mini...

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Main Authors: William Riggs, Shivani Shukla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota 2021-09-01
Series:Journal of Transport and Land Use
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/1955
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spelling doaj-b11774abd0634e33a0e5e61ad9acd9132021-10-03T04:45:58ZengUniversity of MinnesotaJournal of Transport and Land Use1938-78492021-09-0114110.5198/jtlu.2021.1955Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central StockholmWilliam Riggs0Shivani ShuklaUniversity of San Francisco Over the past decade, there has been rapid growth in the development and infusion of new and disruptive transportation. Some of the pivotal emergent technologies range from micro-mobility and bikeshare to ridesourcing that is set to utilize automated vehicles. This paper introduces and defines minimobility that falls between a regular ridesourcing/taxi option and micromobility, and also providing critical logistics services during the era of COVID-19. In Central Stockholm the platform has provided a safe and environmentally friendly mode choice that occupies limited space and efficiently serves on the congested city network. We explore potential economic and environmental benefits of minimobility, discussing the advantages and disadvantages of deploying such a service. While we demonstrate a general increase in VMT, consistent with other work showing increased travel from new mobility, due to the electric platform this increase in customer access to mobility results in minimal GHG impacts. This informs how planners and engineers can explore minimobility platforms not only as reduced emissions solutions to urban transit issues but as tools to increase total mobility particularly for the most vulnerable. https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/1955micromobilityelectric vehiclesridesharingoperational efficiencytransit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William Riggs
Shivani Shukla
spellingShingle William Riggs
Shivani Shukla
Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm
Journal of Transport and Land Use
micromobility
electric vehicles
ridesharing
operational efficiency
transit
author_facet William Riggs
Shivani Shukla
author_sort William Riggs
title Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm
title_short Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm
title_full Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm
title_fullStr Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: The case of central Stockholm
title_sort exploring the benefits of minimobility in the urban context: the case of central stockholm
publisher University of Minnesota
series Journal of Transport and Land Use
issn 1938-7849
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Over the past decade, there has been rapid growth in the development and infusion of new and disruptive transportation. Some of the pivotal emergent technologies range from micro-mobility and bikeshare to ridesourcing that is set to utilize automated vehicles. This paper introduces and defines minimobility that falls between a regular ridesourcing/taxi option and micromobility, and also providing critical logistics services during the era of COVID-19. In Central Stockholm the platform has provided a safe and environmentally friendly mode choice that occupies limited space and efficiently serves on the congested city network. We explore potential economic and environmental benefits of minimobility, discussing the advantages and disadvantages of deploying such a service. While we demonstrate a general increase in VMT, consistent with other work showing increased travel from new mobility, due to the electric platform this increase in customer access to mobility results in minimal GHG impacts. This informs how planners and engineers can explore minimobility platforms not only as reduced emissions solutions to urban transit issues but as tools to increase total mobility particularly for the most vulnerable.
topic micromobility
electric vehicles
ridesharing
operational efficiency
transit
url https://www.jtlu.org/index.php/jtlu/article/view/1955
work_keys_str_mv AT williamriggs exploringthebenefitsofminimobilityintheurbancontextthecaseofcentralstockholm
AT shivanishukla exploringthebenefitsofminimobilityintheurbancontextthecaseofcentralstockholm
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