#urbanplanning

waynerad@diasp.org

Google's Project Green Light uses AI to change traffic lights to get a 30% decrease in red light stops.

"Green Light uses AI and Google Maps driving trends, with one of the strongest understandings of global road networks, to model traffic patterns and build intelligent recommendations for city traffic engineers to optimize traffic flow. Early numbers indicate a potential for up to 30% reduction in stops and 10% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. By optimizing each intersection, and coordinating between adjacent intersections, we can create waves of green lights and help cities further reduce stop-and-go traffic. Green Light is now live in 70 intersections in 12 cities, 4 continents, from Haifa, Israel to Bangalore, India to Hamburg, Germany -- and in these intersections we are able to save fuel and lower emissions for up to 30M car rides monthly."

"Building on our decades-long effort to map cities across the world, we can infer existing traffic light parameters including: cycle length, transition time, green split (i.e. right-of-way time and order), coordination and sensor operation (actuation)."

"We create a model to understand how traffic flows through the intersection. This helps us understand typical traffic patterns including patterns of starting and stopping, average wait times at a traffic light, coordination between adjacent intersections (or lack thereof), and how traffic light plans change throughout the day."

"Using AI, we identify possible adjustments to traffic light timing. We share these adjustments as actionable recommendations with the city. The city's traffic engineers review the recommendations, approve them, and they can easily implement them in as little as 5 minutes, using the city's existing policies and tools."

Project Green Light's work to reduce urban emissions using AI

#solidstatelife #ai #urbanplanning #traffic

hypolite@friendica.mrpetovan.com

Wealthy people making decision to maximize profits is bad enough but wealthy people making decisions without any intention of them being profitable is arguably worse.


Brent Toderian - 2022-11-06 18:28:54 GMT

“Elon Musk admitted to his biographer that the reason the Hyperloop was announced—even tho he had no intention of pursuing it—was to try to disrupt the California high-speed rail project to get in the way of that actually succeeding.” — #ParisMarx #Gizmodo
https://gizmodo.com/silicon-valleys-transportation-failures-tesla-waymo-bir-1849382788 #ElonMusk #Hyperloop #California #HighSpeedRail #cities #transportation #Tesla #CityPlanning #UrbanPlanning
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icavot@pod.orkz.net

Climate change and our current socioeconomic system.

· People need to examine their consumption habits.

· Birthrates and population need to be bellow the carrying capacity threshold.

· Debt-based currencies need to be replaced by debt-free currencies.

· Urban planning needs to be changed. And no, I’m not one of those who propose that people have to live in coffin apartments in overcrowded cities; I actually propose the opposite! go rural!.

· Planned obsolescence and inefficient designs need to be replaced by new systems, a new renewable energy and smartgrid infrastructure needs to be built, etc.

· Progressive tax systems need to be implemented to fund the new infrastructure and social services.

· We need to change the approach to “jobs” and “work-time” . Do people really need to work 5-6 days a week? Wouldn’t it be better if people had more time to grow a garden, do some DIY stuff, study, research by themselves, take care of their relatives, get involved in their communities? Wouldn't it be better if people could use new technologies to work and study more from home?

After reading some articles those were my conclusions. Some sources:

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/qj4ka5/covid-19-broke-the-economy-what-if-we-dont-fix-it

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-16941-y

I’m not saying I agree necessarily with all their recommendations though.

#climatechange #consumerism #pollution #CO2 #overpopulation #birthrates #energy #design #PlannedObsolesce #work #renewable #GreenNewDeal #urban #urbanplanning #taxation

dredmorbius@joindiaspora.com

Reimagining Paradise

A point NPR's Kirk Siegler doesn't make in this story is that large-scale city fires used to be somewhat common, and also presented opportunities to massively re-architect towns. The Great London Fire, the Chicago Fire, the San Francisco Earthquake and Fire, and wartime destruction, particularly during World War II in Germany and Japan, whilst destructive, also allowed for abandoning patterns and structures which were no longer suitable, and for creating new plans and directions with the benefit of past experience.

The story of Paris's redesign in the 19th century, enabled by revolution rather than catastrophic destruction, is another case in point.

Paradise now has this opportunity.

(Though, with the way things have been progressing in wildfire events over the past few decades, it won't be the last.)

#ParadiseCA #urbanPlanning #wildfire #architecture

https://www.npr.org/2019/03/07/700825538/re-imagining-paradise-making-plans-to-rebuild-a-town-destroyed-by-wildfire