Skip to main content

Re-set the clock

The route of the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run, the world's longest-running motoring event, passes right by the end of the street where I live.
February 27, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Jason Barnes, Editor of ITS International
The route of the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run, the world's longest-running motoring event, passes right by the end of the street where I live. The Run has taken place most years since 1896 and to qualify to take part vehicles must have been built before 1905.

It's something of an institution: on the first Sunday of each November a stream of old crocks huff and chuff the 54 miles from Regent Street in the UK's capital down to the coast. Riders, most in period costume, wave to well-wishers at the roadside and - more than occasionally - stop to help others who've broken down or to retrieve some part or other of their car which has decided to fall off. It's a typically British event which glorifies the taking part rather than the winning. Indeed, it isn't even a race; participants aren't allowed to exceed an average speed of 20mph and the order in which cars finish is never published.

It's a snapshot of the almost totally mechanical world which existed when the car was born, a fact underscored by the RAC's launch this year of the Brighton to London Future Car Challenge. Going forward, this will take place on the Saturday preceding the Veteran Car Run and it reverses the long-established route, going from the coast and north back to Regent Street.

The new event showcases the low-energy impacts of the very latest automotive technologies - electrics, hybrids and cutting-edge internal combustion engines. But the decision to reverse the route is the bit that caught my attention. On the same day that the Future Car Challenge took place, I read that IBM is engaged in research to shrink the size of the world's most powerful supercomputer processors to the size of a sugar cube. That story contained some rather remarkable figures: 50 years ago, for instance, a single transistor cost one dollar whereas it now costs 1/100th of the price of printing a single letter on a page.

Think about that. It's a very strong visualisation of the fact that much of what we look to move around is knowledge and information. Once, the only way to do that was to meet face to face. But I was asked recently what I feel is the most carbon-efficient form of transport. My reply was email. Because we do not, in many respects, need to shift people around to do much of what it is we do.

We're coming at transport from exactly the wrong direction. We're still assuming that the application of technology to make things work better is the way forward. It isn't. The way forward is the application of technology to do things in new ways. Not journey reduction, but journey removal. Entirely. I started this year with a foreword which talked about working from home and recognising that 'coping' with transport demand is all a matter of perception. I'm ending the year more convinced than ever that what I said was right.

I'd love to watch superbly instrumented multimodal networks, safe, clean and congestion-free, spread like the most rapacious virus across a map of the world. The reality is that that isn't going to happen, certainly not overnight and probably never. The truth is, though, that many of the aims of such a network can already be achieved through other technological means.

Such a rethink of the application of technology has knock-on effects that are precisely those we're trying to achieve: overburdened infrastructure wears out more quickly, is less safe and contributes significantly to environmental pollution. At the moment, we're just continuing to try to force quarts into pint pots and conning ourselves that becoming more efficient at it is the way forward. The fact that so much stimulus funding around the world has gone into filling holes in the ground should be telling us that we're going awry.

Transport planning needs to start from a point much further back than it ever has before. The holes we should be in-filling are in our information networks as much as in our physical infrastructure. And if that manages to fill a few holes for a few policy people around here, here's the thing: I didn't even have to lift a shovel.

Related Content

  • US state of the art workzone safety
    January 25, 2012
    The Texas Transportation Institute's Jerry Ullman talks about the state of the art in work zone safety in the US. Work zones are places where, perhaps more than anywhere else on the road network, mobility and safety are strongly linked. Historically, field crews and contractors wanted vehicles in work zones to be moving as slowly as possible, assuming that made conditions the safest for work crews. We are though starting to see a shift in such thinking with the realisation that excessive delays or slow-down
  • Need for harmonisation in ITS standards
    February 1, 2012
    As the calendar rolls over, and we hop from continent to continent and World Congress to World Congress, where Memoranda of Understanding and cooperation agreements are the headline news, it is easy for those not intimately involved to forget that standards definition is a well-nigh continual process. Significant progress has been made in recent months towards achieving the critical mass and economies of scale which are going to drive development and deployment in, amongst other things, cooperative infrastr
  • US incident management needs national standardisation
    January 26, 2012
    I-95 Corridor Coalition's Tom Martin discusses the state of the art in incident management and what visitors to this year's ITS World Congress can expect of the first ever Emergency Responder-Incident Management Day. Developments in incident management are driven in the main by need. A bald statement, and one which holds no surprises, it nevertheless quantifies the evolutionary process within the I-95 Corridor Coalition over the last decade and more. Spread over 16 states from Maine to Florida, the Coalitio
  • New technology revolution in urban traffic control?
    January 26, 2012
    Urban traffic control is a well-defined and practised art. Nevertheless, there are technologies here and on the horizon with the potential to revolutionise how we do things. By Gavin Jackman and Andrew Kirkham, TRL, and Jason Barnes. Distributed monitoring and control of urban traffic networks and flows is nothing new. PC-based Urban Traffic Control (UTC) is now well established and operating in many locations around the world. However, it is worth considering the effects of the huge growth in the use of sm