Skip to main content

City of Boston employees to use car sharing services

Zipcar, the leading car sharing network, has announced a new partnership with the city of Boston to launch a new fleet sharing programme called FleetHub. Through this programme, the city of Boston has combined vehicles once dedicated to city departments to create an interdepartmental fleet.
March 14, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
3874 Zipcar, the leading car sharing network, has announced a new partnership with the city of Boston to launch a new fleet sharing programme called FleetHub. Through this programme, the city of Boston has combined vehicles once dedicated to city departments to create an interdepartmental fleet. By deploying Zipcar's car sharing platform in these vehicles, as well as implementing the company’s self-service online reservation and secure vehicle access system, the programme will help the city gain new efficiencies and reduce costs. And with a focus on fleet modernisation and sustainability, the initiative will also help the city dispose of older, under-utilised vehicles. This will help efforts to modernise the fleet with alternative fuel and hybrid vehicles.

"Boston is always looking for ways to be more green, both in saving money and saving energy. This partnership with Zipcar helps us do both," Mayor Thomas M. Menino said. "It will modernise the city's fleet, allowing us to reduce costs and operate more efficiently, providing fuel-efficient vehicles as well as the technology to maintain a convenient, web-based system for use by city employees."

Boston selected Zipcar as its fleet technology provider through a competitive bidding process. The programme will initially be launched as a six-month pilot, which the city plans to extend to more vehicles following successful implementation.

Zipcar's technology has already been adopted through similar initiatives in Washington, DC, and the city of Chicago. In 2009, Washington, DC became the first city to use the Zipcar technology in its fleet, allowing fleet operators to eliminate cars, save money and reduce emissions. DC officials estimate that they save more than US$1 million per year using the technology.

In March 2011, Chicago became the first in the US to integrate both the use of Zipcar technology in its existing fleet and Z4B (Zipcar4Business), the company's business transportation solution. According to the city's projections, the integrated programme could save Chicago hundreds of thousands of dollars in transportation costs over the next several years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New mobility service for Hamburg
    June 16, 2017
    MOIA, the mobility arm of the Volkswagen Group (VW), and Hamburger Hochbahn (Hochbahn) are jointly working on the development of a new and environmentally-friendly mobility service for Hamburg, Germany.
  • Charging trial tests smartphones for road user charging
    January 26, 2012
    A new project is under way in Minnesota, investigating whether smartphones are technically and publicly acceptable for use in road user charging. Jason Barnes reports. In Minnesota, trials have been launched to determine whether smartphones are technologically viable and acceptable to the public for distance based road user charging (RUC). The Midwestern US state has engaged with Battelle to explore RUC technology options in a project which falls under the auspices of the US Federal Connected Vehicle progra
  • New markets for travel information apps
    November 26, 2013
    Purpose-designed travel information apps are emerging to support the real estate market in the US – and potentially more widely – in a major diversification away from the conventional automotive and navigation device sectors. In July 2013, Washington State-based Imprev, which develops web-based marketing support aids for realtors, announced its App Generator. Claimed as an industry first, this enables property businesses to create their own branded mobile apps to give away as marketing tools to potential
  • Mega trends will challenge transport technology
    June 5, 2015
    Jon Masters investigates some of the longer term trends that will shape transportation over the next 20 years. Business analysts and investors have already placed their bets on a future of technological smart mobility services. In December last year, the Wall Street Journal reported that Uber, the on-demand taxi and lift share smartphone app and start-up business, had been valued at $41.2 billion which, as the Journal reported, is an incredible vote of confidence for a company only five years old.