New mobility
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"New mobility": In a first instance not "old mobility", i.e., getting stuck in traffic or waiting in the rain for a bus that may never come. (Also not the next billion dollar metro or subway that is unlikely in the event to serve more than a few percent of the total movement demand of a modern city.)
See New Mobility Agenda for more on this and examples or how it works.
[edit] External links
- The Granada Declaration, Ciudades Accesibles Program of the Spanish Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Environment (MOPTMA), 1993. In English
- 2004 Toronto New Mobility Week
- Kyoto World Cities 20/20 Challenge
- - New Ways to Work in an Information Society
- Green Vehicle Guide]
- Guiding Principles to Sustainable Mobility
- Sustainable Transportation's Dirty Secret, OECD presentation, Environment Directorate, 1996
- Thursday: A Breakthrough Strategy for Reducing Car Dependence in Cities)
- Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP)
- Official EU Car Free Day web site
- European Mobility Week
[edit] See also
New Mobility is a "bouquet" of arrangements and services which in place after place seeks to find the right mix of the following:
Demand
- TDM: Transportation Demand Management
- Congestion charging, road pricing
Supply (New Mobility Bouquet)
- Car Free Days
- Car rental
- Carfree
- Carpooling
- Carsharing
- Cycling, utility cycling
- e-work
- flexible working
- flextime
- Hitch-hiking, Informal or organized
- HOV: High occupancy vehicle
- Human-powered_transport
- Jitney
- Midi-bus
- Mini-bus
- Pedestrian#Pedestrianisation
- Public space management
- Public transport
- Ride sharing
- Roller skating
- Self-Organizing Collaborative Networks
- Share taxis
- Taxis
- Telecommuting
- Telework
- Vanpooling
- Walking