More time spent in cars on longer journeys, due to driverless technology, could facilitate greater urban sprawl and increase car dependency, according to a new study. Photo: Navya

More time spent in cars on longer journeys, due to driverless technology, could facilitate greater urban sprawl and increase car dependency, according to a new study. Photo: Navya

Autonomous vehicles (AV) may be driving on our roads as soon 2025 and could lead to far-reaching impacts on urban tourism, according to new research.

The conceptual paper entitled Autonomous Vehicles and the Future of Urban Tourism, conducted by by Professor Scott Cohen (University of Surrey) and Dr. Debbie Hopkins (University of Oxford), imagines the impact of AVs in future urban tourism and focuses on the pros and cons of these impacts with regards to the transformation of urban space, the rise of autonomous taxis, and changes to city sightseeing and hospitality in the urban night.

Potential benefits include reduced traffic congestion and emissions, improved foreign car hire processes, reduced parking requirements, and cheaper taxi fares. AVs may impact other industries in radical ways too, such as Amsterdam’s Red Light District, which could become operated out of moving AVs, and restaurants and hotels may encounter new competition in the form of AV dining cars and passengers sleeping in their moving vehicles.

Autonomous vehicles may reduce demand for train travel, coach tours, public transport and driven taxis - all resulting in future job losses.

AVs are also the subject of many concerns. More time spent in cars on longer journeys could facilitate greater urban sprawl and increase car dependency, according to the study. AVs may reduce demand for train travel, coach tours, public transport and driven taxis - all resulting in future job losses. The potential for terrorism facilitated by AVs also raises genuine security fears.

The study will "benefit urban planners, policy makers and the tourism and hospitality industries, who will face a range of threats and opportunities as AVs begin to reach the mass market in the coming decade," said Professor Cohen, Head of Tourism and Transport at Surrey’s School of Hospitality and Tourism Management.

“The visitor economy will be gradually transformed if AVs become fully automated and mainstream, leading to a future where hordes of small AVs could congest urban attractions, hop-on hop-off city bus tours may go out of business altogether, motorways between cities could fill at night with slow-moving AVs carrying sleeping occupants and commercial sex in moving AVs becomes a growing phenomenon,” Cohen explained.


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