Destroying the city to save the robocar

The fight for our public space


By Brian Sherwood-Jones, 17th Jan 2018.
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/01/17/destroying_the_city_to_save_the_robocar



Behind the mostly fake "battle" about driverless cars (conventional versus 
autonomous), there are several much more important scraps.

One is over the future of the city … will a city be built around machines or 
people?

How much will pedestrians have to sacrifice for the driverless car to succeed?

The battle over the design and control of urban infrastructure pits two 
distinct ideas against each other.

One narrative of "networked urbanism" envisages the city driven by data 
analytics and their networks controlled by machines. In this "smart city", 
technological solutionism is rampant, with everything connected and automated. 
This is Googleville: a posthuman urban laboratory.

You might expect that the car makers will be happy with this as a future, but 
even here, car ownership and use may fall. Networked urbanism can be dressed up 
as faster, smarter and greener but it is still pushing the corporate panopticon 
into our streets and lives. The life in such a world sounds like a life tended 
by the kindness of corporate automata.

The other vision of the city celebrates "walkable urbanism".

This is gaining in popularity round the world. Detroit is copying the 
bike-friendly, walkable examples of Copenhagen and parts of the Netherlands. 
Earlier this year, urbanist Jeff Speck gave a terrific talk at the US 
Conference of Mayors called "Autonomous vehicles: the right answer to the wrong 
problem". The wrong problem is: How do we make cars better? The right problem 
is: How do we make cities better? And when it comes to cities, there are simple 
limitations of geometry.

The real disruptor is the bicycle, not the robocar.

But the driverless car has to deal with pedestrians, as Christian Wolmar 
discussed in The Register last week: "The open spaces that cities like to 
encourage would end as the barricades go up. Any foot movement would need to be 
enforced with Singapore-style authoritarianism."

Dealing with pedestrians safely is difficult, expensive, and culturally alien 
to the nerds building the cars; Melissa Cefkin at Nissan is a rare 
anthropologist in the business.

"The randomness of the environment such as children or wildlife cannot be dealt 
with by today's technology," admits Volvo's director of autonomous driving, 
Markus Rothoff. The driverless car can't hear you scream. Tests are not being 
conducted in real pedestrian-congested conditions.

The cheat is: just get rid of the people around cars, so you don't need to 
solve these problems.

'Just a little tweak, here and there...'

The slippery slope starts with "modest changes" of course. Two leading 
artificial intelligence gurus, Google's Andrew Ng, and Yyanqing Lin admit in a 
piece ominously titled "Self-Driving Cars Won't Work Until We Change Our 
Roads—And Attitudes".

"Safe autonomous cars will require modest infrastructure changes, designs that 
make them easily recognized and predictable, and that pedestrians and human 
drivers understand how computer driven cars behave," they wrote in 2016.

There are reports of dedicated infrastructure already. A plan to transform 
Interstate 5 between Seattle and Vancouver, BC envisages a three-step process.

"Road signs and lanes disappear, with roadway intelligence built into vehicles. 
Highway lanes expand and contract automatically for high-traffic times," dreams 
John Jones, Fjord's VP of design strategy.

Completely unfounded expectations of performance and safety being used to 
influence infrastructure, driverless cars will be able to travel safely 
bumper-to-bumper, advocates argue. And when that fails, as Wolmar points out, 
there's always moral blackmail.

We can already see the pavement become political. "Sidewalks are often a hotly 
disputed space," this article on delivery robots explains. "People live in 
urban centers not because they want to sit at home in their house and have 
their toothbrush delivered to their door, but because they have a pharmacy 
around the corner that they can walk to," says Nicole Ferrara, executive 
director of pedestrian advocacy group Walk San Francisco. Moves to rid the 
streets of people are already under way.

Research has shown a lack of demand for autonomous vehicles – nearly six in ten 
Americans do not want to ride in one. MIT found that drivers, even millennials, 
want clever technology to help the driver, not replace them (PDF). Ultimately, 
driverless cars are part of the tech utopia that nobody wants. But rather than 
technology, it is money and momentum behind them; they keep the share price up 
in the face of Google and Tesla.

And it's a utopia that may never happen. Jeff Speck reminds us that the 
predictions of full autonomy are decades away. "I would challenge anyone in the 
automated driving field to give a rational basis for when level 5 will be 
available," says Dr Gill Pratt, head of the Toyota Research.

If we want walkable urbanism (and we should), we will have to make a stand. ®

Brian Sherwood-Jones has 40 years' experience in all of the Human Factors 
aspects of complex systems, helping to design and improve the safety of ships, 
helicopters and nuclear power stations. He blogs about usability and design, 
where a version of this piece first appeared.
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