Driverless cars and future of parking

Alphabet Inc. subsidiary Waymo got the green light to test its driverless vehicles in California, an expansion of the program currently underway in Arizona. Waymo’s minivans will be driving in a swath of Silicon Valley around its headquarters, an area the company says it knows well. If — or when — Waymo and other driverless-car operators expand into denser urban areas, it could mean more traffic. It could also mean a different engagement with an urban landscape built for passenger vehicles. We can find hints of both north of Waymo’s California testing grounds, in San Francisco.
A report published in October by the San Francisco County Transportation Authority points the finger at the services offered by companies like Uber Technologies Inc. and Lyft Inc. as major causes of worsening traffic. From 2010 to 2016, ride-hailing services accounted for 51 percent of the increase in daily delays, 47 percent of the increase in vehicle miles traveled, and 55 percent of the average decline in speed on roadways — while adding an estimated 25 percent of total vehicle congestion.
Adding driverless vehicles to this dynamic wouldn’t help much, and it could certainly worsen it. Driverless vehicles might be better drivers than human drivers (eventually), but if they are just adding to traffic, they won’t help with delays or congestion. Even a theoretically perfect driverless car on the way to pick up a passenger is still an empty vehicle adding to traffic.
Architects and city planners are anticipating not that parking garages will become more valuable in the future, but that they will become less valuable — and thus should be designed to be convertible to other uses (like housing) someday.
Jim McPherson of Safe Self Drive notes where transportation network companies (TNCs), like Uber and Lyft are finding themselves in the changing travel landscape:
Just look at airports. Daily and hourly lots across from terminals are emptying as more people use TNCs to drop and go. But the curbside drop zones are getting more and more congested. Essentially everyone that would have parked and walked from the short and long term lots, is now competing at the curb in the drop zone in individual vehicles.
This is why airports like New Orleans have directed TNCs to drop in the short term parking lot across from the curb loading zone. Yes, riders have to walk an extra 50 to 100 yards for their rides, but multiple people can load simultaneously, cars have room to temporarily stop and wait for the next ride — even if they haven’t been hailed yet. That reduces emissions, reduces congestion, and makes rides immediately available for the next rider.
One can imagine public parking garages becoming like train stations to which all autonomous vehicles and TNCs must go for drops and pickups. If cars dropped passengers in front of each store, congestion would result.
In this vision of the future, a garage isn’t an end destination; it’s a hub. San Francisco’s public garages, mapped here, could and should become city assets.
The driverless car might kill off street parking, but it would inject new value into public parking infrastructure — what McPherson calls “one of the most undervalued assets cities own.”

—Bloomberg

Nathaniel Bullard is an energy analyst, covering technology and business model innovation and system-wide resource transitions

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