As I opined in the Journal of the Institute of Transportation Engineers.
In 30 years or so,
my kindergartener son and his cohorts will be commuting in
driverless electric cars that can reach 0-60 mph in 5
seconds, follow at a headway of under 0.5 seconds on narrow
high capacity lanes (some four lane urban highways will
convert to automated guideways with six 8 ft. lanes), be a
full office away from home or work, and still be exciting to
drive in off-drivereless mode outside the city.
The future of transportation engineering in the U.S. will be great as long as we do not expend substantial resources on modes of the past millennium such bicycles and ordinary trains, except for limited applications where they may be both practical and cost-effective.
Mr. Schwartz’s
call for making the transportation engineer relevant is
important. Sharing this realization, I ran twice for Mayor
of Honolulu on an infrastructure preservation and traffic
congestion relief platform and I garnered almost 20% in both
2008 and 2010. Mr. Schwartz' advise to transportation
engineers is good except for his instruction to “get people
out of cars.” New York City may boast that 70% of commutes
occur on non-auto modes, but it’s an exception. The next
U.S. city with a low auto-mode share barely has 30% of
commutes occurring on non-auto modes. Telecommuting is
surpassing transit. Car-sharing, and intelligent and
autonomous zero emission vehicles will maintain the auto
mode’s dominance.
The future of transportation engineering in the U.S. will be great as long as we do not expend substantial resources on modes of the past millennium such bicycles and ordinary trains, except for limited applications where they may be both practical and cost-effective.
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