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Facilitating E-Commerce at the State and Local Levels: High Technology Meets (and Perhaps Depends on) the Old

Facilitating E-Commerce at the State and Local Levels: High Technology Meets (and Perhaps Depends on) the Old. by Michael D. Meyer, Ph.D., P.E. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology. Information Technologies and Influence virtual communities

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Facilitating E-Commerce at the State and Local Levels: High Technology Meets (and Perhaps Depends on) the Old

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  1. Facilitating E-Commerce at the State and Local Levels: High Technology Meets (and Perhaps Depends on) the Old by Michael D. Meyer, Ph.D., P.E. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology

  2. Information Technologies and Influence virtual communities cyber cities cyberopolis infocities telecommunities network cities digital places

  3. Virtual communities that networks bring together are often defined by common interests rather than by common location….the story of virtual communities so far, is urban history replayed in fast forward---but with computer resource use playing the part of land use, and network navigation systems standing in for streets and transportation systems….as more and more business and social interactions shift into cyberspace, we are finding that accessibility depends even less on propinquity, and community has come increasingly unglued from geography [Mitchell, 1999].

  4. The old demarcation between work and home will evaporate---in its place will be a shift in the location of work, a new role for cities, a new role for the home, and reshaped communities….In half a century’s time, it may well seem extraordinary that millions of people once trooped from one building (their home) to another (their office) each morning, only to reverse the procedure each evening…All this might strike our grandchildren as bizarre [Cairncross, 1996].

  5. 10 U.S. Cities Most Likely to Benefit From the Internet (Stephen Roulac, 2000) New York, San Jose, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston, Seattle, Atlanta, Chicago, Miami and D.C. Why? “these cities are able to attract the talent….” “sense of place, beauty in the natural environment, transportation system, 24-hour city with mixed uses/mixed activity/diversity”

  6. Sommers and Carlson, The Brookings Institution “Ten Steps to a High Tech Future” Location decisions for high tech players varied by sector High tech manufacturers: suburban industrial parks due to cost factors and future expansion New telecommunications, internet content, and e-commerce companies: downtown locations for the “infrastructure” and competitive advantage in hiring talent Biotechnology firms: near research institutions and hospitals

  7. Ten Steps to a High Tech Future • Understand high tech firms and your city’s competitive • advantage • Invest in human capital • Create research and development presence • Invest in physical capital • Invest in quality of life • Streamline permitting, planning, and other public services • Adapt other local laws (such as special tax policies) • Provide venture and seed capital • Create support programs for entrepreneurs • Apply information technology in the public sector

  8. Hal Cohen “Like anything else, high tech requires infrastructure, and like any infrastructure, the new tends to go right where the old was as economic logic says to minimize risk by investing in already dominant areas….new telecom infrastructure like fiber optic is run between the same important info hubs that already dominate via copper connections, often on rights-of-way of even older infrastructure such as railroads and highways, reinforcing those networks’ traditional, city-centric organization of space.” Mitchell Moss “The future is much more like Silicon Valley or San Francisco where firms engaged in the same activities thrive by being next to each other, where they can access each other’s products and labor forces.”

  9. This implies that enhancing the transportation system as part of a metropolitan strategy to improve quality of life and promote the livability of urban places directly fits into a strategy of encouraging e-commerce and high tech development

  10. SMART GROWTH (ITE SPECIAL ISSUE) • Comprehensive plan • Regulations/ordinances • Growth boundaries • Pedestrian/bicycle/transit • Flexible design • Access management • Intelligent transportation system • Incentives and disincentives • Pricing • Special improvement districts

  11. What about business transportation? • Five major economic trends have affected the nature of business transportation requirements: • Importance of trade and globalization of the economy • Growth of service industries • Restructuring of traditional manufacturing to increase competitiveness andemergence of high technology and knowledge-based industries. • Industrial location and demographic trends, including increased flexibility for businesses in their location decisions and an aging population • Reduced government roles and increased privatization

  12. Average Daily Number of Trips by Vehicle Type • Vehicle Type N Mean • Light-Duty Trucks 991,233 4.99 • Medium-Duty Trucks 91,060 9.96 • Heavy-Duty Trucks 231,112 4.83 • Base: All trips, including vehicles that made no trips on travel day (weighted). • Comparison of Weighted Daily Truck Trips. • City Mean • Atlanta 6.88 • San Antonio, TX 8.27 • Phoenix, AZ 7.70 • Winston-Salem / High Point / Greensboro, NC 7.40

  13. Commercial Trips by Land Use Destination

  14. Average Total Daily Mileage by Commercial Vehicle Type

  15. Average Trip Length (miles) by Commercial Vehicle Type

  16. Time of Day

  17. E-business and freight movement • Collaborative logistics (reduction in empty miles; • source of transportation cost savings; network • perspective) • Evolution from linear supply chain to “value • webs” • Dispersed manufacturing; merge-in-transit; • interfaces • Implications? Requires real time information; • 95%+ reliability

  18. Demand for smaller and more frequent shipments; • favors air and expedited ground delivery • Intermodal and terminal transshipment capacity is • the key • E-business requires a transportation system that • performs in a way that is comparable in ease and • reliability. • B2C requires a transportation system that provides • near ubiquitous access to all possible consumer • locations in a market.

  19. Important Emerging Issues • “Distributed” business operations • Location of consolidation/distribution centers and impact on • surrounding transportation system • Neighborhood/community-based subcenters • Employee access to these distribution centers • Consolidation of intermodal terminals to gain economies of • scale • Desirable transportation system performance focused on • reliability • Fleet vehicles powered by fuels other than carbon based

  20. Examples Brownfield intermodal freight infrastructure in northern New Jersey Global freight village Commuter rail package dropoff New warehousing next to international airport Package delivery distribution/collection facility within one block of rail intermodal facility Truck-only facilities Curb management strategies

  21. Conclusions The transportation system plays an important part in “completing the transaction.” Terminal capacity, location and operations that allow integrated product movements across modes are critical business decisions in providing the most cost efficient delivery of services. Proximity of e-commerce activities suggests an important supporting role for good transportation

  22. Transportation Planning Issues Over Time

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