Are cars our kings?


Apr 14, 2023

“Yes, we have made them so,” says scientist Rafael Prieto-Curiel. As long as the paradigm persists that cars are the most comfortable way to get around, sustainable transport will have a hard time.

In 2019, the population grew by about 79 million people, while at the same time we produced 83 million cars. In Las Vegas, for example, 32% of the central part of the city is dedicated to car parking. Cities like Mexico City rely on pedestrian overpasses so that cars do not have to stop.

Workshop at the Complexity Science Hub on sustainable mobility © Rafael Prieto-Curiel

But what about Vienna, a city that has been awarded the world’s most liveable city several times? Here, too, we treat cars like royalty. Rarely do pedestrians have a similarly long green phase at the intersection as car drivers. And sometimes it’s downright stressful to reach the other side of the road in time. Driving a car is comfortable, driving a car is fast. “As long as that is the case, it will be difficult to get people to choose sustainable mobility,” explains Prieto-Curiel.

Workshop at the Complexity Science Hub on sustainable mobility © Rafael Prieto-Curiel

What is sustainable mobility?

Everyone has their daily journeys to make. The number of these journeys is roughly the same in different parts of the world in a normal week. However, there are forms of mobility that are more sustainable than others. “We currently know of only two sustainable types of mobility: active mobility such as cycling or walking, and a well-planned public transport network,” explains Prieto-Curiel.

Cars cannot be sustainable, whether they are internal combustion or electric. Some reasons are:

 

  • Cars require infrastructure (roads, car parks, …).

 

  • Cars require large amounts of (non-renewable) raw materials and materials. We cannot recycle tires, for example, so they often end up in large landfills where they are burned. This smoke is so toxic that it would be too dangerous for firefighters to extinguish it.

 

  • Car accidents lead to an estimated 1.3 million deaths a year.

 

  • Driving increases inequalities (for example, more men than women drive and in some parts of the world only wealthy people can drive).

 

  • Driving causes stressed drivers.
Workshop Sustainable Mobility: Rafael Prieto-Curiel © CSH/AB

For all these reasons, cars should not be the means of choice for getting around in cities. Nevertheless, the car is still on the rise. For example, in the US, you basically need a car to transport one person. In order to make sustainable forms of mobility more convenient and thus more attractive, the infrastructure must be expanded accordingly.

 

Therefore, the workshop “Sustainable Mobility: Data, Networks and Complexity” brought together researchers and policy makers from Vienna and Copenhagen to discuss strategies to make roads safer for cyclists and reduce car dependency.

THE WORKSHOP AT A GLANCE:

What are the challenges to expanding Vienna’s cycling infrastructure?

 

Mobilitätsagentur Wien director Martin Blum shared some insights about the current situation in Vienna as well as strategies policymakers should keep in mind when expanding Vienna’s cycle paths. Vienna currently has around 1,600 km of cycling infrastructure. 50 new projects, 80 per cent of which are cycle paths or streets, are intended to make cycling even more attractive.

An open-source tool to access Vienna’s bike infrastructure data quality


Anastassia Vybornova, from IT University of Copenhagen, demonstrated how to use BikeDNA, an open-source tool for bicycle infrastructure data assessment. She will also present an assessment of bicycle infrastructure data quality for data both from OpenStreetMap and from the City of Vienna’s Open Government Data.

 

How cities should plan cycle networks?

Michael Szell from IT University of Copenhagen showed how cities should plan cycle paths optimally. He simulated the cycle paths of 62 cities around the world – including Vienna – and found that it’s not how long the network is, but how you grow it.

 

How can cities achieve sustainable mobility?

Complexity Science Hub researcher Rafael Prieto-Curiel presented opportunities to achieve more sustainable mobility for different types of cities — including Vienna.

 

A new tool for observing mobility in cities

Anita Graser, from AIT, discussed MovingPandas, a Python library for movement data analysis that provides mobility data processing and analysis tools for analytics and data science workflows.

 

How far is the mobility revolution in Vienna?

Ulrich Leth, from TU Wien, presented the existing gaps between the targets for a sustainable mobility in Vienna and the actual development, which is due to a mix of hesitant policy, insufficient measures, and a lack of resources.

 

Upscaling the transformation of public space in Austria

Barbara Laa, from TU Wien, discussed how to transform public spaces to create a sustainable and resilient transport system. Streets must give way to pedestrians, cyclists, public transport, and green infrastructure.


Press

End Times by Peter Turchin review – can we predict the collapse of societies?


The Guardian, May 28, 2023

Publication

C. Deischinger, E. Dervic, S. Nopp, M. Kaleta, P. Klimek, A. Kautzky-Willer

Diabetes mellitus is associated with a higher relative risk for venous thromboembolism in females than in males

Diabetes Res Clin Pract. (2022) 36471550

Event

CSH Talk by François Lafond "Firm-level production networks: what do we (really) know?"


Jun 07, 2023 | 15:0016:00

Complexity Science Hub Vienna

Publication

V.D.P. Servedio, M. R. Ferreira, N. Reisz, R. Costas, S. Thurner

Scale-free growth in regional scientific capacity building explains long-term scientific dominance

Chaos, Solitons & Fractals 167 (2023) 113020

News

May 31, 2023

Forensic analysis shows signs of election fraud in Turkey

Press

Obesity increases the chances of developing mental disorders for all age groups


News Medical, May 30, 2023

Research News

May 30, 2023

Obesity increases risk of mental disorders throughout life

Press

Wie Medikamente durch die Welt reisen


NEWS, May 31, 2023

People

May 30, 2023

Meet Sachin Rawat

Publication

A. Nerpel, et al.

SARS-ANI: a global open access dataset of reported SARS-CoV-2 events in animals

Scientific Data 9 (438) (2022)

Event

CSH Talk by Thomas Choi "Supply Networks: Dyads, Triads, Tetrads, and Beyond"


Jun 06, 2023 | 15:0016:00

Complexity Science Hub Vienna

News

May 31, 2023

Forensic analysis shows signs of election fraud in Turkey

People

May 30, 2023

Meet Sachin Rawat

Research News

May 30, 2023

Obesity increases risk of mental disorders throughout life

News

May 25, 2023

Quotas alone will not solve the problem

Spotlight

May 17, 2023

Complexity Research for Digital Humanism

People

May 12, 2023

Peter Turchin introduces his new book

Research News

May 2, 2023

Scientists create high-resolution poverty maps using big data

News

Apr 26, 2023

BEYOND COLLECTIVE STUPIDITY

Spotlight

Apr 21, 2023

How does a region become a center for innovation?

Spotlight

Apr 14, 2023

Are cars our kings?

Press

End Times by Peter Turchin review – can we predict the collapse of societies?


The Guardian, May 28, 2023

Press

Obesity increases the chances of developing mental disorders for all age groups


News Medical, May 30, 2023

Press

Wie Medikamente durch die Welt reisen


NEWS, May 31, 2023

Press

Kritik an EU-Chatkontrolle


Ö1 | Digital.leben, May 11, 2023

Press

Treibjagd im Darknet: Neue Technologien für Cyber-Ermittler


Salzburger Nachrichten, May 16, 2023

Press

„Die Älteren halten zu Erdogan, die jüngere Generation hat andere Sorgen“


Cicero, May 9, 2023

Press

Stablecoin Destabilization - why should we care?


Forbes, Apr 27, 2023

Press

„Wir sind nicht so einfach zu manipulieren“ [feat. Hannah Metzler]


Kurier, Apr 29, 2023

Press

Die manchmal fatale Lust, alles selbst zu recherchieren [feat. Mirta Galesic & Henrik Olsson]


Die Presse, Apr 14, 2023

Press

La scienza ha creato una nuova classificazione delle aperture degli scacchi [ital | feat. Vito Servedio & Giordano De Marzo]


WIRED, Apr 10, 2023

Publication

R. Prieto-Curiel, J. E. Patino, B. Anderson

Scaling of the morphology of African cities

PNAS 120 (9) (2023) e2214254120

Publication

A. Di Natale, D. Garcia

LEXpander: applying colexification networks to automated lexicon expansion

Behaviour Research Methods (2023)

Publication

V.D.P. Servedio, M. R. Ferreira, N. Reisz, R. Costas, S. Thurner

Scale-free growth in regional scientific capacity building explains long-term scientific dominance

Chaos, Solitons & Fractals 167 (2023) 113020

Publication

C. Deischinger, E. Dervic, S. Nopp, M. Kaleta, P. Klimek, A. Kautzky-Willer

Diabetes mellitus is associated with a higher relative risk for venous thromboembolism in females than in males

Diabetes Res Clin Pract. (2022) 36471550

Publication

A. Nerpel, et al.

SARS-ANI: a global open access dataset of reported SARS-CoV-2 events in animals

Scientific Data 9 (438) (2022)

Publication

E. D. Lee, X. Chen, B. C. Daniels

Discovering sparse control strategies in neural activity

PLoS Computational Biology (May 27) (2022)

Publication

H. Kong, S. Martin-Gutierrez, F. Karimi

Influence of the first-mover advantage on the gender disparities in physics citations

Communications Physics 5 (243) (2022)

Publication

T.M. Pham, J. Korbel, R. Hanel, S. Thurner

Empirical social triad statistics can be explained with dyadic homophylic interactions

PNAS 119 (2022) e2121103119

Publication

G. De Marzo, V.D.P. Servedio

Quantifying the complexity and similarity of chess openings using online chess community data

Scientific Reports 13 (2023) 5327

Publication

D. R. Lo Sardo, S. Thurner, et al.

Systematic population-wide ecological analysis of regional variability in disease prevalence

Heliyon 9(4) (2023) e15377

Publication

J. Wachs

Digital traces of brain drain: developers during the Russian invasion of Ukraine

EPJ Data Science 12 (2023) 14

Publication

D. Diodato, R. Hausmann, F. Neffke

The impact of return migration on employment and wages in Mexican cities

Journal of Urban Economics 135 (2023) 103557

Event

CSH Talk by Thomas Choi "Supply Networks: Dyads, Triads, Tetrads, and Beyond"


Jun 06, 2023 | 15:0016:00

Complexity Science Hub Vienna

Event

CSH Workshop: "Firm-level supply network data for policy making"


Jun 05, 2023 | 8:00Jun 06, 2023 | 17:00

Complexity Science Hub Vienna

Event

CSH Talk by François Lafond "Firm-level production networks: what do we (really) know?"


Jun 07, 2023 | 15:0016:00

Complexity Science Hub Vienna