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Transport for humans: are we nearly there yet?

Part of the Perspectives series
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Engineers plan transport systems, people use them. But the ways in which an engineer measures success - speed, journey time, efficiency - are often not the way that passengers think about a good trip.

We are not cargo. We choose how and when to travel, influenced not only by speed and time but by habit, status, comfort, variety - and many other factors that engineering equations don't capture at all.

As we near the practical, physical limits of speed, capacity and punctuality, the greatest hope for a brighter future lies in adapting transport to more human wants and needs.

Behavioural science has immense potential to improve the design of roads, railways, planes and pavements - as well as the ways in which we use them - but only when we embrace the messier reality of transport for humans.

This is the moment. Climate change, the coronavirus pandemic and changing work-life priorities are shaking up long-held assumptions.

There is a new way forward. This book maps out how to design transport for humans.

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£10.00
Product Details
London Publishing
1913019373 / 9781913019372
eBook (EPUB)
388.068
18/11/2021
England
English
1 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.