HOW TO MOVE STUFF WITHOUT A CAR: Designing municipal services that provide the means for moving and storing our things without trunks, hatchbacks, glove compartments, or passenger seats

Item

Title
HOW TO MOVE STUFF WITHOUT A CAR: Designing municipal services that provide the means for moving and storing our things without trunks, hatchbacks, glove compartments, or passenger seats
Description
Cars are not just devices that move people from A to B. They are also tools that we use to move heavy objects like groceries or bags of potting soil. They provide us with storage anywhere we go. They facilitate spontaneity, flexibility, and emergency preparedness by making it easy to bring extra warm clothes, equipment, or almost anything else that we might want or need. Cars serve many functions, but we don’t have good substitutes in American cities for most of these roles. This thesis argues that if we want to build more equitable cities and reduce our reliance on cars, we need to pay attention to the ways that people move and stash their possessions while they navigate through their day. This thesis uses Cambridge and Somerville as a site to explore a suite of design interventions that would make it easier to transport, store, and access objects without needing cars.
Creator
Voorhees, Sage Grey
Subject
Car-Free
Grocery Carts
Micromobility
Personal Belongings
Public Lockers
Pulic Transportation
Urban planning
Transportation
Contributor
Stockard, Jim
Date
2023-05-18T04:16:11Z
2023
2023-05-17
2023-05
2023-05-18T04:16:11Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Voorhees, Sage Grey. 2023. HOW TO MOVE STUFF WITHOUT A CAR: Designing municipal services that provide the means for moving and storing our things without trunks, hatchbacks, glove compartments, or passenger seats. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
30521628
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37375225
Language
en