Title: MOBILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY IN CITIES
1MOBILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY IN CITIES
- Tamás Fleischer
- Institute for World Economics of the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences - http//www.vki.hu/tfleisch/
- tfleisch_at_vki.hu
Section mobility and accessibility
2Mobility and accessibility in cities
- A SHORT GENERAL INTRODUCTION INTO THE TOPIC
- About the changing technological paradigms and
their appearance in the Charters and in the
mobility issues - Modernity period and the Athens Charter
- Post-modern period and the Leipzig Charter
- A BUDAPEST CASES
- Why a new Budapest Transport Frame Development
Plan (2008) - Story of the lower Danube embankment
3Changing technological paradigms
This concept was first presented in Catch the
Wave, The Economist, 18 February 1999 Figure
courtesy of The Natural Edge Project, Australia,
30 October 2006.
- A short general introduction into the topic
4Changing technological paradigms
- An early one wood wind water
- Industrialisation, growing big towns, the train
period of coal steam engine steel/rail - Modernity period and the Athens Charter
- Post-modern period and the Leipzig Charter
5Modernity period and the Athens Charter
- 4th Congress of CIAM (Congress Internationaux
dArchitecture Moderne) 1933 - To solve the housing problem of people gt
mass-construction of flats the housing estate
(small boxes of flats in ten-level buildings,
following an industrialised production system.) - Adjusting city to ideas and technologies
functionally homogeneous quarters (land-use
modes) business district, residential area,
industrial area, recreation area. - Effective mass production, economy of scale, big
is better, planned - Transport small boxes of units the new dominant
mode is the road gtGood technology means better
hardware (motor, vehicle, fuel, M-way) - In cities surface is needed for cars rails
under or over the surface. Less tram, narrowed
sidewalks, less trees, subordinated zebra
crossings, shifted bus-stops etc. The space is
not enough, cars need more space - The main target is to ease the (motorised)
mobility - Citius, altius, fortius (swifter, higher,
stronger)
6Technological waves of the transport
Shift between modes. Time-to-time a new
technology becomes dominant
7Technological waves of the transport
Shift between modes. Time-to-time a new
technology becomes dominant. Long-term cycles
8Technological waves of the transport J.H.
Ausubel, C. Marchetti, and P. Meyer (1998)
Toward green mobility the evolution of
transport, European Review, Vol. 6, No. 2, pp.
137-156. own addition
3
2
1
9The post-modern and the Leipzig Charter
- Everything goes (world music, citations,
reutilise, reuse) - New key words integration, co-operation,
partnership, networking, consultation, adjusting,
adaptation (mutual dependencies) - There are external constraints environment
counts, society counts, city-life counts, organic
life counts Our planned, man-made system must be
adjusted to the constraints. - New set of orientations and values flexibility,
buffers, reserves, redundancies, diversity
(versus efficient, uniform, optimal etc.) gt - Leipzig Charter 24-25 May, 2007 on sustainable
European cities - Main ideas integrated approach ( Structural
Funds) - COMPLEX SYSTEMS (Salingaros, Nikos A (2000)
Complexity and Urban Coherence. Journal of Urban
Design, Vol. 5. pp.291-316.) The city consists of
modular units from small elements. Homogenous
elements are not able to couple. The importance
of diversity. - Instead of the macro-scale functional divide, the
necessity of neighbourhood level
multifunctionality. (City of small distances,
small cities within a metropolis, mixed zones,
smart city, walking distances)
10The post-modern and the Leipzig Charter
- RISK SOCIETY (Ulrich Beck (1986)
Risikogesellschaft Auf dem Weg in eine andere
Moderne. Suhrkamp) - New relation with risks
- Myth of modernity production of goods are in the
centre, as calculable activity, the
not-intended technological consequences are
external effects. - The new approach risks and side-effects are
not incidental phenomena, but parts of the
system. To every technologies there is a normal
risk (Who invented the rail also invented the
derailment Paul Virillio) - Vulnerability and resilience what we need is
good feedbacks, diversified resources,
alternative transport routes, non-hierarchical
systems, buffers, redundancies. - In our cities (re)construction is not an
extraordinaire phenomenon (hard-disk we need
15-20 free space) - SUSTAINABILITY1 not to emit more that the
environment can admit not
to use more, than that the environment can
reproduce. - SUSTAINABILITY2 the ability of the system to
reserve a sensibility to be able to adapt itself
to the changing external circumstances.
11The post-modern and the Leipzig Charter
- Transport there is not any more a single
dominant transport mode, what is needed is a good
mixture of possibilities. (intermodality,
combined transport, interoperability, third party
access, local networking etc. That is integration
and cooperation between transport modes, btw.
propriety forms, btw. sector targets, sector
policies etc.) - The place in the city is given congestions
meaning is not that the space is lacking, but
that there are too many cars. The surface must be
used in the interest of the whole city life. - Good technology also means better software
(regulation, organisation) and not just better
hardware - Energy lesson not more kWh but better service
(heat, light, etc.) - The main target is better accessibility that is
solving the reason of the mobility (getting
closer) by not just transport but also by land
use - It is important to see both possible side of the
better accessibility mobility and land use.
Better accessibility with less transport
12NEW TRANSPORT PLAN FOR THE HUNGARIAN CAPITAL
- Tamás Fleischer
- Institute for World Economics of the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences - http//www.vki.hu/tfleisch/ lttfleisch_at_vki.hugt
13A new Budapest Transport Frame Development Plan
(2008)
- Why is it necessary if the old one was
accepted in 2003 - Two characteristic feature of the 2003 plan
(emphasised by me) - (1) Big intermodal intersections to change mode
/ relations - (2) Metro-4 between two railway-stations of the
middle zone - That is separate treatment of the capital and the
metropolitan area and intermodality as
concentrated obligate change between vehicles.
Sharp border-lines reinforced. - 2007-08 S-Bahn concept how to utilise the 11
suburban railway lines in the city transport
transverse lines instead of ending all at
terminals more crossing points with less choice
at one point. Softened borders - 2008 has brought also small promotion in
tariff-system in the public transport of Budapest
and its metropolitan zone - New level of modal and territorial integration,
financial co-operation
14A new Budapest Transport Frame Development Plan
(2008)
- New level of modal and territorial integration,
financial co-operation - BUT
- All the projects already decided earlier still
remained the same! - A kind of mental path-dependency
15Towards a sustainable and liveable city
- We had to learn that
- It is not enough if we use the new technology
only for developing our tools, our hardware - It is not enough if we use the information
technology only to solve old problems by them - There are no definite, optimal, ever-best
solutions any more - We need intelligent (able-to-learn, adaptive,
demand-sensitive) systems - Three key elements of the new context
- Integrations (within and around the transport
sector) - Sustainability
- Complexity
16Towards a sustainable and liveable city
- The Leipzig Charter is a document of the last
year and summarises an up-to-date approach of
urban development, that can be characterised as a
post-modern or post-industrial paradigm. - The most important key-words of this period are
- integration, co-operation, partnership,
networking, co-ordination, consultation,
coherence, - adjustment, adaptation,
- feedbacks, alternatives, non-hierarchical
systems, flexibility, buffers, reserves,
redundancies, diversity, risk and vulnerability,
resilience, - Summarised again integrations, sustainability
and complexity
17MOBILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY IN CITIES
- Tamás Fleischer
- Institute for World Economics of the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences - http//www.vki.hu/tfleisch/
- tfleisch_at_vki.hu
THANKS FOR YOUR KIND ATTENTION !
Section mobility and accessibility