Parking futures: The relationship between parking space, everyday life and travel demand in the UK

被引:14
|
作者
Spurling, Nicola [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lancaster, Sociol Dept, Lancaster LA1 4YD, England
[2] Univ Lancaster, Inst Social Futures, Lancaster, England
关键词
Dormant vehicles; Parking; Urban mobility; Practice theory; Social futures; MATERIALITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.landusepol.2019.02.031
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The paper proposes and develops an original concept, dormant vehicles, which refers to vehicles that are stationary while waiting to be used again, such as current parked cars. The concept involves several types of vehicles (cars, bikes, vans, automated vehicles), durations, temporal locations and rates of recurrence that, with the emergence of new mobility futures, would have diverse forms with significant implications for land use, space and place. New forms of dormant vehicle include shared electric vehicles, dock-less bikes and delivery vans that besides parking would present new in-between use situations such as dropping-off, picking-up, delivering, charging and awaiting repair. The paper highlights that without thinking clearly about these aspects of the future, plans for sustainable, smart cities could fall into a similar trap as in historical versions of automobility and parking, that is, of overlooking dormant vehicles and the ways they shape and are shaped. Rather than parking conveniently disappearing from cities, it is instead likely to change in various respects. The paper sets out to put this research agenda at the forefront, drawing on social theories of practice to propose and develop this new concept, highlighting its potential contribution to urban futures thinking. Ultimately, the paper argues for inverting urban mobility futures to identify the new forms of dormant vehicles associated with them, and consider their implications for land use, space and place.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [2] Parking futures: Shared automated vehicles and parking demand reduction trajectories in Atlanta
    Zhang, Wenwen
    Wang, Kaidi
    [J]. LAND USE POLICY, 2020, 91
  • [3] Balacing Parking Space With Motorized Travel Demand In Sustainable Development Context
    Almselati, Aldukali Salem I.
    Rahmat, Riza Atiq O. K.
    Jaafar, Othman
    [J]. 2010 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER AND AUTOMATION ENGINEERING (ICCAE 2010), VOL 3, 2010, : 304 - 306
  • [4] Integrating parking behaviour in activity-based travel demand modelling: Investigation of the relationship between parking type choice and activity scheduling process
    Habib, Khandker M. Nurul
    Morency, Catherine
    Trepanier, Martin
    [J]. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2012, 46 (01) : 154 - 166
  • [5] Impact of hourly parking pricing on travel demand
    Nourinejad, Mehdi
    Roorda, Matthew J.
    [J]. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2017, 98 : 28 - 45
  • [6] Evaluation for Parking Demand of Urban Complex on Parking-Space Level
    Wang, Zhiyuan
    Chen, Jun
    Zhang, Chu
    Guo, Haomin
    [J]. CICTP 2022: INTELLIGENT, GREEN, AND CONNECTED TRANSPORTATION, 2022, : 2571 - 2581
  • [7] Disaggregate Analysis of Relationships Between Commercial Vehicle Parking Citations, Parking Supply, and Parking Demand
    Wenneman, Adam
    Habib, Khandker M. Nurul
    Roorda, Matthew J.
    [J]. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD, 2015, (2478) : 28 - 34
  • [8] A Day in the Life of a Parking Space Testing a Parking Hour Utilization Metric
    Willson, Richard
    [J]. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH RECORD, 2017, (2651) : 101 - 107
  • [9] PARKING SPACE FOR CARS - ASSESSING DEMAND - ROTH,GJ
    MILLS, G
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES A-GENERAL, 1967, 130 : 262 - 262
  • [10] PARKING SPACE FOR CARS - ASSESSING DEMAND - ROTH,GJ
    MUNBY, DL
    [J]. URBAN STUDIES, 1968, 5 (02) : 232 - 233