Overview
Ready to imagine and create human-centered mobility futures? Using cycling as a lens to view pressing mobility and sustainability issues of today, this 3 course specialization is about opening possibilities for more resiliant and convivial cities of tomorrow. First, we use the Netherlands a as a case study for a cycling based mobility system in Unraveling the Cycling City. Then, we invite you to reflect on our mainstream mobility narrative built on engineering and economics in Alternative Mobility Narratives. Finally, we look at the role of innovation in creating an easier, safer and more accessible mobility systems in Being Smart about Cycling Futures.
Syllabus
Course 1: Alternative Mobility Narratives
- Offered by Enviolo and University of Amsterdam. Ready to imagine a radically different mobility future? This course is about the stories ... Enroll for free.
Course 2: Unraveling the Cycling City
- Offered by Enviolo and University of Amsterdam. Obscured by its apparent simplicity, cycling is a complex phenomenon. Being an almost ... Enroll for free.
Course 3: Being Smart about Cycling Futures
- Offered by Enviolo and University of Amsterdam. What is the future of cycling in our cities that struggle to transition to more sustainable ... Enroll for free.
- Offered by Enviolo and University of Amsterdam. Ready to imagine a radically different mobility future? This course is about the stories ... Enroll for free.
Course 2: Unraveling the Cycling City
- Offered by Enviolo and University of Amsterdam. Obscured by its apparent simplicity, cycling is a complex phenomenon. Being an almost ... Enroll for free.
Course 3: Being Smart about Cycling Futures
- Offered by Enviolo and University of Amsterdam. What is the future of cycling in our cities that struggle to transition to more sustainable ... Enroll for free.
Courses
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Obscured by its apparent simplicity, cycling is a complex phenomenon. Being an almost perfect human-machine hybrid, cycling is deeply rooted in a plethora of socio-technological systems. Around the world cycling is embraced as an important ingredient to tackle a wide variety of individual and societal challenges. The Netherlands is often seen as an ideal living lab, because cycling has retained its significant share of mobility throughout the country. At the same time, there are large differences in developments across time and space, that allows for a better understanding of potential causal relations. This is also increasingly recognized by (inter)national top tier researchers from many different academic fields. They are uncovering reciprocal relations of cycling with spatial, ecological, historical, social, cultural, economic, biological and political structures. Unraveling the Cycling City bundles the state-of-the-art knowledge that emerges from research and practice on the Dutch cycling system. As such, it provides an easily accessible platform to learn about important causes and effects, to open minds for the complexity of the entire system and to support group deliberations around the world.
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Ready to imagine a radically different mobility future? This course is about the stories that we tell ourselves about why and how we move. By critically examining our current narratives, we help you think about mobility in a new way. Using systems dynamics modelling, we explore how a mobility innovation (of your choice) impacts our mobility system as a whole, for better or for worse. This course will invite you to reflect on our mainstream mobility narrative built on engineering and economics. But warning: you may end up never looking at mobility in the same way again! This online course is supported by the EIT Urban Mobility’s Competence Hub. EIT Urban Mobility is an initiative of the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) that has been working since January 2019 to encourage positive changes in the way people move around cities in order to make them more sustainable and liveable places.
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What is the future of cycling in our cities that struggle to transition to more sustainable and inclusive forms of mobility? What is the role of innovation in ensuring that cycling becomes easier, safer and more accessible for different groups of people? What are Great Bikes and what are Great Cycling Cities? In this course we tackle these questions, but we do so without providing recipes, one-size-fits-all solutions or rankings of innovations. Instead, this course helps you to develop your own approach to cycling futures and innovation. It teaches you to ask critical questions about various aspects of cycling practice and its place in mobility systems, about cycling innovation and the way in which various stakeholders imagine cycling futures. This unique course is grounded in the results of the Smart Cycling Futures project (2016-2020), conducted in the Netherlands but through readings and assignments it engages with the wider world. Course development was made possible by sponsor enviolo.
Taught by
Anna Nikolaeva, George Liu, Marco te Brömmelstroet and Meredith Glaser