Be-Mobile - Urban traffic management via access rights

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Urban traffic management via access rights Wouter Van de Wiele


TABLE OF CONTENTS Current situation Restricting access: 1. Stationary in an urban area

2. Arriving at an urban area 3. All mobility in an urban area Urban acces control center


CURRENT SITUATION Future-proof mobility vision

Setting realistic policies

Urban mobility should be more sustainable

Cities should remain accessible

• Reduce air pollution and congestion

• Do not exclude certain groups

• Promote alternate forms of transport

Budget constraints • Parking = revenue + Covid impact

Access to cities should become more digital • Use a smartphone, smartwatch or even the car

Polarized debate • A new initiative can expect a huge amount of criticism

• Enable new use cases and features with data

Scattered landscape • Many stakeholders and parties must be coordinated

Urban Access Control Center

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MEANS: URBAN ACCES RIGHTS

1.

Stationary in the city center All mobility standing still in the city must pay an “access right”.

2.

Arriving at the city center Further steer mobility by giving priority to public transport and keep polluting vehicles out of the city center.

3.

All city center mobility Implement tolling to ensure the polluter-pays principle applies, let visitors access the city center and organize shared mobility.

Urban Access Control Center

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1. STATIONARY


TODAY: ACCES RIGHTS VIA PARKING

Steer mobility by setting a suitable tariff •

Still one of the strongest measures to reduce access to urban city centers

Advanced usage of the curbside •

Define urban zones where users cannot obtain rights: • Car spot • Corona terrace, temporary park or garden,…

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STATIONARY ACCESS RIGHTS IN THE FUTURE Advanced tariffs • • •

Freight vehicles can only park during certain timeframes, communicated digitally No longer focused on visitor parking, for instance: residents do not get a permit but pay a reduced rate Use access rights data to improve mobility

Towards full curbside management •

A curb is not seen as a revenue source, but as a space and a time in the city • Advanced rules • Communicated digitally towards visitors and inhabitants • For all sorts of mobility

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2. ARRIVING


TODAY: VEHICLES ARRIVING MUST OBTAIN ACCESS Access right: Low emission ticket • •

Polluting vehicles must pay to obtain access to urban areas • Alternative: nudging of hybrid vehicles Measuring impact: city pays partner for amount of pollution reduced

Access right: Receive priority at traffic lights and bollards • •

Public transport gets priority over other vehicles at traffic lights Trucks can pay to obtain a “green light”

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ARRIVING AT THE CITY CENTER IN THE FUTURE Other forms of mobility arrive at the city center, set rules • •

To set rules for autonomous vehicles To guide freight traffic in the city • Drones are only allowed to fly in this zone, during this timeframe, at this altitude and should follow this route • Guide vehicles to areas with the least amount of traffic

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3. ACCES RIGHTS FOR ALL URBAN MOBILITY


TODAY: ACCESS RIGHTS VIA CITY TOLLING City tolling •

External costs are also factored in for drivers using urban roads • Advanced tariffs • Depending on vehicle type • Depending on time of day / week

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FUTURE: URBAN ACCESS MANAGEMENT No need to implement ALPR cameras •

Enable smaller cities to steer mobility • Use the parking operator, police, a scan car and the city counstable available today

Combine technologies for an Urban Access Control Center •

Parking, low emission zones, ALPR net, tolling, distance control no longer exist in separate silos but are combined in a suite

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URBAN ACCES CONTROL CENTER


URBAN ACCES CONTROL CENTER Drivers

Authorities • Advanced Rules • Reporting

User interface

Apps

Website

Urban Access Control Center Tolling

Traffic Priority Parking

LEZ

• • • •

Trucks and Vans Cars Public Transport Other forms of mobility

Enforcement • • • • •

Parking Operators Police City counstables ALPR cameras Scan cars

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BUT WHY?

Enable cities

Control future mobility

A city should be able to • implement its vision without needing a large mobility department • Communicate with stakeholders on the outcomes of new mobility policies

• • •

Increasing parking tariffs doesn’t work? Implement a LEZ or city tolling Be ready for autonomous vehicles or other forms of mobility Be hardware agnostic Enable new use cases by combining technologies

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URBAN ACCESS CONTROL In-Car Communication Priority at traffic lights Updated travel times Parking information Traffic events Public transport tickets Bridge and tunnel tolling In-Car traffic information Matrix signs Urban tolling Policy implementation Parking space usage Digital parking rights


RECAP: WILL IT WORK? Urban Access Control

Future-proof mobility

Setting realistic policies

• Digital access

• Accessible cities

• Possible to implement sustainable policies

• Resolve budget constraints

• Polarized debate • Scattered landscape


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