Skip to main content

Sidewalk Labs and Transportation for America partner on smart cities

Google’s smart cities research unit Sidewalk Labs has partnered with Transportation for America (T4A), an alliance of elected, business and civic leaders in an initiative to engage cities in developing efficient and affordable transportation options. The two organisations will work with dozens of US cities to define how technology can help them meet their pressing transportation challenges. This collaborative aims to help local leaders get more people where they want to go quickly and affordably, enhancing
June 6, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Google’s smart cities research unit Sidewalk Labs has partnered with 2039 Transportation for America (T4A), an alliance of elected, business and civic leaders in an initiative to engage cities in developing efficient and affordable transportation options. The two organisations will work with dozens of US cities to define how technology can help them meet their pressing transportation challenges. This collaborative aims to help local leaders get more people where they want to go quickly and affordably, enhancing liveability and sustainability, by harnessing powerful data and the availability of new digital tools.

The partnership will build on Sidewalk Labs’ expertise in working with cities to develop digital technology that solves big urban problems, combined with Transportation for America’s experience in collaborating with state and local governments to develop forward-looking transportation and land use policy.

Through the partnership, T4A will launch an in-depth study on the state of current transportation policy and technology in American cities, and build a peer-learning collaborative of city leaders to define and design the ‘connected streets’ of the future. They say connected streets will advance the concept of complete streets into the digital realm.

Just as the complete streets framework gives local leaders the policy tools to improve the safety and equity of streets for all users across all modes, connected streets offers tech-enabled interventions that can support local efforts to move people more seamlessly, efficiently, and affordably. Connected streets can help create a truly balanced, multimodal approach to urban transportation that expands access to job opportunities and improves quality of life across a city.

Sidewalk Labs announced in March that it is building a new transportation coordination platform called Flow, in partnership with the 324 US Department of Transportation and seven finalist cities from the DOT’s Smart City Challenge. The Flow team has met with all the finalists to understand the challenges they face and what tools might help them meet their goals for creating efficient, sustainable, equitable, and safe transportation systems. The winner of the Smart City Challenge will be announced in June, and will receive Flow at no cost.

Related Content

  • July 24, 2015
    Looking for the next generation of smart city innovators
    With the aim of fostering innovation and developing the next generation of technology talent, GE Lighting has become the founding sponsor of a unique new urban regeneration initiative, the Intelligent Community Challenge. Centred on a design competition, the initiative aims to crowd source new perspectives and fresh ideas on key urban challenges such as public safety, crime, social inclusion, traffic and pollution, by uniting local councils, communities and university students to develop intelligent and inn
  • January 24, 2012
    Improve and increase mass transit systems to minimise congestion
    Rather looking to solve congestion by spreading the load, perhaps we need to look at concentrating it. Michael L. Sena writes. We humans were made to walk and run at embarrassingly slow speeds by comparison with other, more fleet-footed organisms. The sea is not our natural habitat and we were definitely not designed to fly unaided. Nevertheless, humankind has evolved a method of living during the past century that is dependent on transporting its members over very long distances during relatively short per
  • March 4, 2019
    IBTTA: ‘The only way to keep up is to stay ahead’
    The focus of the IBTTA’s Annual Technology Summit is changing. The tolling organisation’s Bill Cramer explains why this is good news for ITS professionals looking to embrace new technologies For a decade or more, the technology summits hosted by the International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association (IBTTA) have helped drive the tolling industry’s embrace of the systems, services and breakthrough concepts that are building a 21st century transportation sector. Now, the summit itself is adjusting its
  • August 26, 2015
    Washington, DC, tops list of gridlocked US cities
    The 2015 urban mobility scorecard for the US, published jointly by the Texas A&M Transportation Institute and Inrix, indicates that urban areas of all sizes are experiencing the challenges seen in the early 2000s and population, jobs and therefore congestion are increasing. The US economy has regained nearly all of the nine million jobs lost during the recession and the total congestion problem is larger than the pre-recession levels. Cities of all sizes are experiencing the challenges last seen before t