Skip to main content

NACTO releases ‘blueprint’ for AVs in cities

Autonomous vehicles (AVs) must be part of future transport policies which prioritise efficiency and fairness, according to senior transport executives in the US and Canada. The second edition of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)’s Blueprint for Autonomous Urbanism sets out what it calls “the concrete steps that will need to be taken to ensure an equitable, people-first city”. NACTO is a collection of 81 North American cities and transit agencies which exchange ideas and coo
September 13, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) must be part of future transport policies which prioritise efficiency and fairness, according to senior transport executives in the US and Canada.


The second edition of the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO)’s %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external Blueprint false https://nacto.org/publication/bau2/ false false%> for Autonomous Urbanism sets out what it calls “the concrete steps that will need to be taken to ensure an equitable, people-first city”.

NACTO is a collection of 81 North American cities and transit agencies which exchange ideas and cooperate on national transport issues and its policy recommendations are aimed in part at improving transit using driverless technologies.

But the new document warns that “merely shifting from current to autonomous technologies will not be enough to address the climate and safety challenges that we face or to address long-standing racial and socio-economic inequities”.

It adds: “Instead, the autonomous future must be guided by thoughtful, bold, transformative public policy and street design practice that reduces driving and vehicle miles travelled and offers mobility and opportunity to everyone, not just those in cars.”

The Blueprint insists that there is no point introducing driverless technology unless there is also “a comprehensive overhaul of how our streets are designed, allocated and shared”.

Cities should prioritise kerbside uses and modes that serve the most people in the most sustainable fashion: “Buses, para-transit, and other surface transit, which are the most efficient way to move people, come first.”

There should also be a commitment to high-quality on-street transit, with technologies such as computer-aided dispatch and automatic vehicle location systems used “to improve efficiency and create services that attract riders”.

While AVs could make driving “easier and cheaper” than today, “absent policy mechanisms and incentives to encourage people to use the most efficient modes, traffic and pollution, already at crippling levels in many cities, will continue to increase”.

Congestion pricing is ‘crucial’ to influencing travel behaviour, the document suggests.

“City governments must work rapidly to change how street space is designed and allocated before yesterday’s values become enshrined in tomorrow’s concrete,” said Corinne Kisner, executive director of NACTO. “Taking proactive steps now means a future where people come first in an autonomous age.”

Related Content

  • Comment: Be wary of fads – but embrace change
    June 26, 2018
    Along with death and taxes, there is one other certainty in modern life: change. In this issue of ITS International, Jarrett Walker (an urban transit expert who has unaccountably ruffled the feathers of Tesla’s Elon Musk) sensibly implies that we should be wary of fads, but there are some developments which require our full attention. Among these are connected and autonomous vehicles: try as we might to avoid them as dinner party topics of conversation, the world outside of ITS is waking up to the
  • Grab secures $300m to expand presence in South-east Asia
    July 9, 2019
    Grab has received $300 million to further accelerate its expansion in South-east Asia. Justin Leverenz, senior portfolio manager at Invesco – the company which has put up the cash - says the investment will support Grab in its “bringing more everyday services, greater accessibility and convenience to users in South-east Asia”. Earlier this year, Grab began working with property developer Sinar Mas Land to deploy electric scooters in Indonesia and to help strengthen BSD (Bumi Serpong Damai) city’s posi
  • Karhoo among winners of European Startup Gold Prize
    April 16, 2019
    Ride-hailing platform Karhoo was selected as one of the Gold Prize winners for the European Startup Prize for mobility in a ceremony at the European Parliament in Brussels. Other Gold Prize winners are: Geovelo for its software platform for cyclists, Shotl (mobility platform for public transport operators), Twaice (predictive battery analytics software) and Einride (all-electric autonomous vehicle services). Karhoo was chosen among the 50 finalists by a jury of mobility influencers and thought leade
  • Truck driver with foot on dashboard is among 4,000 drivers caught by unmarked HGV Cab
    November 7, 2017
    Highways England has released footage of a truck driver checking his phone while his right foot was on the dashboard. Spotted by Humberside Police, the driver was travelling from the M18 onto the M62 near Goole and is one of 4000 dangerous drivers on UK roads caught by a single unmarked HGV cab over a two year period. Another driver was pulled over by Devon and Cornwall Police and was found to have sent 10 replies to 10 texts within one hour and a driver in Surrey was seen trying to put toothpaste on a to