Disposable infrastructures: ‘Micromobility’ platforms and the political economy of transport disruption in Austin, Texas

Author:

Stehlin John1ORCID,Payne Will2

Affiliation:

1. University of North Carolina, USA

2. Rutgers University, USA

Abstract

The rapid rise of digital platform-based transportation services over the past decade has begun to transform urban mobility. Fleets of dockless bicycles and scooters – or ‘micromobility’– represent the newest horizon of investment, particularly in the United States. Micromobility platforms launch rapidly, with minimal public planning or funding and no fixed infrastructure, using inexpensive, GPS-connected vehicles stored in public space. These platforms represent a deepening of the neoliberalisation of transport, in which infrastructural properties emerge biopolitically from the dynamics of private platforms. This article examines public debates over the regulation of micromobility platforms in Austin, Texas, in early 2018. Drawing on interviews with city officials and bikesharing professionals, observation of public meetings and GIS analysis of usage data, we argue that conflicts we observed over new micromobility platforms – specifically ‘clutter’, equity in geographic coverage and data privacy – obscured the deeper political economy of platformisation and the austerity that limited the effectiveness of the existing public station-based bikeshare system. In Austin, the search for ‘innovative’ micromobility transportation at no public cost resulted in the further erosion of the underfunded public system. We argue that despite their flexible, low-carbon image, existing micromobility platforms in the United States largely exploit rather than address inadequacies of urban transport.

Funder

United States National Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

Reference77 articles.

1. Anzilotti E (2018) The brewing fight over who controls the new wave of dockless bike share. Fast Company, 31 January. Available at: https://www.fastcompany.com/40522169/the-brewing-fight-over-who-controls-the-new-wave-of-dockless-bike-sharing (accessed 14 September 2021).

2. “We’re building their data”: Labor, alienation, and idiocy in the smart city

3. Austin BCycle (2018) Passes and membership. Available at: https://web.archive.org/web/20181120131209/https://austin.bcycle.com/ (accessed 14 September 2021).

4. Austin City Council (2018) Regular meeting session transcript. 26 April. Available at: http://www.austintexas.gov/department/city-council/2018/20180426-reg.htm (accessed 6 June 2020).

5. Austin Transportation Department (2018) Emergency rules for deployment of emerging transportation mobility systems: Dockless mobility technology – Rule no. R161-18.09e. Available at: http://www.austintexas.gov/edims/document.cfm?id=298067 (accessed 12 June 2018).

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