Non-motorised public transport : the past, the present, the future


Autoria(s): Rahman, Mamun Muntasir; D'Este, Glen; Bunker, Jonathan M.
Data(s)

17/06/2010

Resumo

Non-motorized public transport (NMPT) involves cycle-powered vehicles that carry several passengers and a small amount of goods; and provide flexible hail-and-ride services. Effectively they are non-motorized taxis. NMPT is widespread in developing countries, where it caters for a wide range of mobility needs. Common forms include cycle-rickshaw (Bangladesh, India), becak (Indonesia), cyclos (Vietnam, Cambodia), bicitaxi (Columbia, Cuba). Over the last 10-15 years there has also been a re-emergence of NMPT in the form of pedicabs in many developed countries because of the operating flexibility of NMPT, its eco-sustainability, and its ability to operate where use of motorized vehicles is restricted. In particular, in cities such as Berlin, London, New York and Vancouver, pedicabs are making the transition from ‘novelty’ to ‘serious’ transport mode. This is creating new transport policy/planning questions about pedicab operation and integration. This paper examines the phenomenon of NMPT and where it is heading. It uses case studies from Asia/Latin America and Europe/North America to examine emerging NMPT issues and possible responses, and how this may affect NMPT in Australia and New Zealand where it is still somewhat a ‘novelty’ but has potential as both an opportunity and a challenge.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/32775/

Publicador

The Planning and Transport Research Centre (PaTReC)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/32775/3/c32775.pdf

http://www.patrec.org/atrf.aspx

Rahman, Mamun Muntasir, D'Este, Glen, & Bunker, Jonathan M. (2010) Non-motorised public transport : the past, the present, the future. In Australasian Transport Research Forum 2010 Proceedings, The Planning and Transport Research Centre (PaTReC), National Convention Centre, Canberra.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 [please contact the authors]

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Urban Development

Palavras-Chave #120506 Transport Planning #Non-motorized public transport #pedicab #mobility #sustainable transport role #Australia & New Zealand
Tipo

Conference Paper