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Transport and society

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All raw materials must be conveyed to the manufacture or usage ... emerged along river systems (Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, Indus, Ganges, Huang He) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transport and society


1
Transport and society
  • Lecture 1
  • The transport task and the history of transport
  • Transparencies

2
The transport task
  • Everybody travels (work, shopping, leisure,
    business)
  • All raw materials must be conveyed to the
    manufacture or usage
  • All goods must be moved from the factory to the
    consumer
  • Transport is the means by which these activities
    occur
  • Meeting these needs is the transport task
  • Solutions to transport problems can have major
    influences on peoples lives
  • Transport engineering applies technological and
    scientific principles to the planning, design,
    operation and management of transport facilities
    to provide for safe, rapid, convenient,
    economical and environmentally compatible
    movement of people and goods

3
The purpose of transport
  • The ideal transport mode would be
  • instantaneous
  • free
  • have unlimited capacity
  • always available
  • Would render space obsolete
  • Purpose of transport is to overcome space
    reduce friction of distance fulfil the demand
    for movement
  • Transportability the ease of movement of
    people, freight or information

4
Transport a derived demand
  • Direct derived demand direct outcome of
    economic activities
  • Indirect derived demand movements created by
    other movements

5
The importance of transport
  • Historical the rise of civilizations,
    development of societies, national defence
  • Social access to social service, shape social
    interactions
  • Environmental significant negative effects on
    air and water quality, noise level, public
    health, climate change
  • Economic linked to economic development,
    transport industry, facilitates economies of
    scale, influences land values and geographic
    specialisation, shaping and being shape by
    economic activities

6
The importance is growing
  • Growth of the demand both people and goods are
    moved in larger quantities over longer distances
  • Reduction of costs cost per unit transported
    has dropped significantly total time spent on
    travelling relative constant
  • Expansion of infrastructures roads, harbours,
    airports, railways, telecommunication, pipelines

7
The transport system a strategic infrastructure
  • If disrupted the consequences can be dramatic
  • Access is not accessibility
  • Distance is not time

8
The transport system
9
Transport and space
  • Topography mountains, passes, valleys, plains,
    are important
  • Hydrography availability of navigable rivers,
    lakes, shallow seas (Mississippi, Rhine, Mekong,
    Yangtze)
  • Climate temperature, wind, precipitation (snow,
    heavy rainfall, ice, fog, jet streams)
  • Absolute and relative barriers

10
Transport and spatial structure
  • All locations are relative to one another
    reflecting the relationships between transport
    infrastructure, economic activities and the built
    environment
  • Costs friction of distance in time and monetary
    terms
  • Accessibility
  • Agglomeration to take advantage of economies of
    scale

11
The land-use transport feedback cycle(Wegener,
1995)
12
Infrastructure changes slowly
  • Though rapid development of transport
    technologies the spatial structure of many
    networks has not much changed
  • Physical attributes natural conditions that
    affected road construction in the past are still
    in force today (the structuring role of rivers in
    northern Sweden)
  • Historical considerations new infrastructure
    generally reinforce historical patterns of
    exchange (the highway network of France)

13
New technologies transform existing networks
  • Container shipping, jumbo aircraft, information
    technology are creating a new transport
    environment and a new spatial structure
  • Regional specialisation in production, increased
    trading, globalisation of production
  • Segregation spatial competition through
    economies of scale
  • Concentration and dispersion (shopping centres
    versus housing location)

14
Space/time relationship
  • Space/time convergence (1700-1800 railways, 1900
    road and air transport systems, 2000 information
    technologies?)
  • Speed however recently use of faster modes
    rather than the modes becoming faster
  • Economies of scale larger volumes at lower
    costs
  • Expansions of transport infrastructures also
    larger average distance of transport
  • Efficiency of transport terminals has reduced
    door to door transport time
  • However also increased road congestion and air
    transport delays

15
Historical evolution of transportThe
pre-industrial era (pre-1800s)
  • The wheel was invented in Mesopotamia 5000 BC
    come into wide usage 1000- AD
  • The first manufactured roads in Ur 4000 BC
  • No motorised transport Animal labour for land
    transport, wind for maritime transport (8-15
    km/h)
  • Civilisations emerged along river systems
    (Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, Indus, Ganges, Huang He)
  • The first road system the Roman road network
  • Trade local, city radius lt 2.5 km (Rome, Beijing,
    Constantinople, Venice)
  • Inland passenger and freight transport very
    limited
  • International trade for luxury goods (the Silk
    Road used for 1500 years)

16
Cart the battle of Ur (circa 2600 BC)
Source Wikipedia
17
The Silk Road and the Arab sea routes
18
A camel driver in Dunhuang on the Silk Road
19
Roman road network, 200 AD
20
Maritime transport
  • Its geopolitical implications were recognised
    very early
  • The discovery by the Portuguese of the North
    Atlantic wind pattern (? 1400)
  • Fall of Constantinople to the Turks ? Necessary
    to find maritime routes between Europe and Asia
    (Columbus, Vasco da Gama)
  • Vave of European exploration and colonisation
    Triangular trade pattern Europe ? Africa ?
    America ? Europe
  • Collapsed with the steamships, end of slavery,
    independence of colonies of the Americas

21
Colonial trade pattern, North Atlantic, 1700s
22
The industrial revolution (1800-70)
  • Massive change of the transport systems based on
    the steam engine
  • Canal systems (a short-lived era)
  • Capital for road building in Great Britain
    through road tolls (turnpikes) 1750 1850
    (travel time from London to Edinburgh down from
    12 to 4 days in 50 years)
  • Railway networks 1850-, flexible, high carrying
    capacity toll roads and canal systems couldnt
    compete
  • Transcontinental line in USA 1869 (travel time
    down from six months to one week), Canada 1886,
    trans-Siberian railway 1904

23
The industrial revolution (1800-70) Maritime
transport
  • Regular maritime routes linking harbours
    worldwide
  • First regular services for transatlantic
    passenger transport by steamships in 1838
  • Establishment of large distribution networks of
    raw materials and energy

24
Modern transport systems (1870-1920)Maritime
transport
  • Improvements in engine propulsion technology
  • Gradual shift from coal to oil
  • Increased speed, capacity reduced energy
    consumption for maritime transport
  • Infrastructure the Suez (1869) and the Panama
    (1914) canals major reductions in distances
  • Increasing size of ships, massive investments in
    port infrastructures
  • Regular international passengers transport
    services

25
Impacts of the Panama and Suez canals
26
Modern transport systems (1870-1920)Rail and
urban transport
  • Railway networks expanded tremendously
  • Became the dominant land transport mode for
    passengers and goods with dedicated services
  • First public urban transport systems enabled
    urban sprawl
  • Tramways (streetcars)
  • Underground metro systems (London from 1863)
  • Bicycle became the commuting mode for the
    working class
  • Developments in telecommunications (from 1850)
  • Led to standard time zones

27
The Fordist era (1920-70)
  • The assembly line, the internal combustion
    engine, the pneumatic tyre enabled competitive
    motor vehicles
  • The T-Ford from 1913
  • Further increasing size of ships
  • Beginning of air services (mail distribution and
    passengers)
  • First commercial jet plane in 1958
  • Mass introduction of radio and telephone
  • Large diffusion of the car, especially from 1950s
  • Implied a drastic change of lifestyles and the
    structure of cities (radius gt 50 km)

28
The post-Fordist era (1970-)
  • Massive development of telecommunications (fibre
    optic cables, satellite communication, Internet,
    mobile telephones)
  • Globalisation of trade (international division of
    work, the container system, principle of
    just-in-time)
  • Expansion of passenger (and later valuable goods)
    air traffic (outperformed maritime passenger
    services)
  • Emergence of high-speed (300 km/h) train networks
    (Shinkansen, TGV)
  • Car the main mode of individual transport
    mobility, congestion, waste of energy, climate
    change

29
The change of the transport system
  • Transport innovation new technology makes an
    existing mode more efficient and competitive or
    obsolete
  • Technological innovation faster and more
    efficient transport systems space-time
    convergence (new modes, higher speeds)
  • Technological evolution transport and economic
    development are interlinked

30
Development of operational speed, 1750-2000 (km/h)
31
Future transport
  • Peak oil production, higher energy prices,
    environmental concern question the car and truck
    dependency
  • Alternatives?
  • Maglev (magnetic levitation) no friction, 500-600
    km/h (in Shanghai from 2003)
  • Automated transport systems
  • Fuel cells (electric generator using catalytic
    conversion of hydrogen and oxygen), possible
    energy source for light vehicles
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