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Auto
Nation: Re-Thinking the Future of
the Car
By: Richard Carson (*)
- writer, editorialist, practicing
planner member of the American Planning Association.
Date: 2003/09
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The popular New Urbanist press reaks with an amazing xenophobia
about the car. Jane Holtz Kay (1)
, in Asphalt Nation, claims that the "automobile has
ravaged America's cities and landscape." The promotional material
for Suburban Nation, by Andres Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk
(2) , calls for an "end
to suburban sprawl and to replace the automobile-based settlement
patterns of the past fifty years." James Howard Kunstler
(3) says of his book, The Geography of Nowhere,
"a lot of people share my feelings about the tragic landscape
of highway strips, parking lots, housing tracts, mega-malls, junked
cities, and ravaged countryside." Even an old guard urbanist
like Anthony Downs can't resist taking a cheap shot to get a laugh.
He says "In Houston, a person walking is someone on his way
to his car."
Of course it is always popular to be against convention in order
to sell books. But there are limits to such ridiculous rhetoric.
America is the most powerful nation on earth, with one of the
highest standards of living, and with an amazing amount of personal
independence and mobility. Much of this is so precisely because
of the car.
The good news is that this auto-phobic, psychobabble is in for
a head-on-collision with technological reality. I came to this
conclusion a few years ago after I read an article by Amory Lovins,
the co-founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute (4).
Lovins says that there is now the technology available to build
a new ultra light hybrid automobile -- the hypercar (5).
Lovins says that this technology will re-invent the automobile
as a powerful American institution well into the next millennium,
though it "cannot solve the problem of too many people
driving too many miles; indeed they could intensify, by making
driving even more attractive, cheaper, and nearly free per extra
mile driven." He explains that the only limit is that
"drivers would no longer run out of oil or air but would
surely run out of roads, time and patience."
There are two reasons this is such a powerful statement. First,
the Institute's environmental mission is to "foster the efficient
and sustainable use of resources." So they are hardly in
the automobile industry's pocket. Second, the public-private partnership
behindthis evolutionary mission is the combined forces of the
federal government and the big three Detroit automakers.
The new technology's benefits are hard to resist:
· New composite materials will be 50 percent to 85 percent
cheaper than using steel, so such vehicles can retail for around
$15,000.
· The new vehicles are environmentally cleaner since at
100-to 300-mpg they will use very little oil and will produce
cleaner air and climatic protection.
· They will improve our quality of life through quieter
streets and neighborhoods.
This kind of evolutionary technological change is comparable to
replacing 8-track tapes with CDs, mainframe computers with PCs
or the slide rule with the pocket calculator. Lovins claims that
the new automobiles will "carry a family coast to coast
on one tank of fuel, more safely and comfortably than they can
travel now, and more cleanly."
So what's the problem? Many current government planning policies
are being driven by a desire on the part of environmentalists
and some sympathetic elected officials to change the American
automobile culture. The anti-automobile sales pitch is designed
to radically change our lifestyles, limit our mobility by getting
us out of the car, and to have us walk, ride a bike or use transit.
We are told that we must stop driving the automobile and use
transit because the auto uses a finite fuel resource and pollutes
the air. But what if this were no longer a concern?
Edward Deming's theory on total quality management, and Osborne
and Gaebler's writing about re-inventing government tell us that
the basic tenant of private and public sector organizations today
should be to give the customer what they want in terms of product
and quality. Conversely, the authors believe we must stop trying
to sell something that customers don't want to buy. Worldwide
annual automobile production has increased almost exponentially
from about 5 million cars in 1910 to 40 million in 2000 (6).
The total number of vehicles currently in use and on the road
today is around 500 million. That works out to an amazing one
vehicle per 12 people. "People want the automobile."
Some state and local governments are promoting the idea of "neo-traditional
planning," which promotes design that makes neighborhoods
more pedestrian and bicycle friendly, creates "skinny streets,"
and orients houses to the front yard. "We have government
agencies trying to rearrange how commercial developments orient
building and not parking to streets." Their bottom line is
to make it more "pedestrian friendly" and less "automobile
friendly." The problem with such a public-policy miscalculation
is that it could have tremendous long-term social and economic
repercussions. It is one thing for a private company to bet-the-farm
on technological change -- or the lack of it. It is quite another
for government to gamble the taxpayers' money on an outdated and
wrong-headed conviction that government should convince us to
do something we don't want to do.
So what is the prognosis for the automobile? The freedom of mobility
is what makes Americans different. We go where we want, when we
want. It will remain the transportation choice for the overwhelming
majority of Americans well into the next millennium.
It is time for those who would be king to end the denial about
the automobile. It is here to stay and will only get more popular.
The automobile will be here long after New Urbanism becomes yesterday's
architectural news. Only when a person can step into the Star
Trek transporter at home and say "Beam me up Mr. Scott"
will the car end its technological usefulness. Let us not be so
myopic or hypocritical. Almost everyone who reads this article
either drives or wishes they could drive.
I am not suggesting that we abandon the quest for a more multi-modal
transportation system. However, we should build the system people
want. It is clear most people prefer the automobile to mass transportation.
It is clear that those who need or want mass transit want light
rail over buses. The also says a lot about us as a society, that
we would give people -- who are too young, too old, too disabled
or too environmental sensitive to drive -- a quieter, cleaner
form of transportation. But much of what is being done today to
offer us transportation alternatives will not address the real
issue that infuriates most of us -- traffic congestion.
However, the only real hope to traffic congestion and oil dependency
is technology. Telecommuting is becoming more of a reality every
day. This is where government needs to invest it precious dollars.
Indeed, if there is any good news to be found in the 911 tragedy,
and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, it is that we are more interested
in telecommuting and we have rekindled the dependency on oil debate.
Certainly the best alternative is less oil consumption for geo-political
and environmental reasons. But demonizing the automobile in order
to reduce oil consumption is pursuing a false doctrine.
In fairness to the Rocky Mountain Institute, Lovins says that,
"Whether we will have the wisdom to build a society worth
driving around in -- one build around people, not cars -- remains
a greater challenge." But as T.S. Elliott warned, "A
thousand policemen directing traffic cannot tell you why you come
or where you go." I would say that this also nicely describes
a thousand New Urbanists.
(1) http://www.janeholtzkay.com/AsphaltNation/index.html
(2) http://www.fsbassociates.com/fsg/suburbannation.htm#reviews
(3) http://www.kunstler.com/bio.html
(4) http://www.rmi.org/
(5)
http://www.rmi.org/sitepages/pid386.php
(6) http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch1en/conc1en/carprod1950-1999.html
Author
Richard
Carson. Former elected official of the American Planning
Association, Oregon Planners' Journal editor, maintains the American
Planning Association's Planning Publications website and is the
Urban Studies editor for Zeal/LookSmart, the Web's largest Internet
directory, with 2.3 million websites, used by search engines including
Microfsoft's MSN, AltaVista, Netscape, InfoSpace, Excite, Dogpile,
MetaCrawler and WebCrawler.
"The
Golden Mean" - Planum Themes online - July 2003
Read
comments on "The Golden Mean"in Planetizen
"Urban
Realism: What is past is prologue" by Richard Carson in
Planum Forum
Richard
Carson article "Another Tale of Two Cities" in Plan
Net
Richard
Carson home page

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