I’ve always been fascinated with transport systems and how people move around cities. In high school I used to spend all day playing games like SimCity and designing intricate urban regions and multi-modal transport systems. When it came time to choose a career, I knew it had to be something to do with cities and transport. I decided to study civil engineering and architecture, a degree which would help me understand cities from both a technical and design oriented perspective. At university I quickly realised that the job of a traditional civil engineer, such as structural and geotechnical engineering, wasn’t for me but when I did transport engineering subjects I knew I had found the SimCity-like thinking about how to design great cities and regions – exactly the thing I had always craved! I ended up getting an internship in transport planning and eventually joined Arup as a graduate transport planner.
In my time at Arup I have helped deliver several projects looking at the future of cities, whether that be modelling future transport scenarios, advising the government and private developers on how to prepare for AVs and electric vehicles, or helping understand and design future proofed digital and physical infrastructure for key bus routes. In particular, I am interested in the intersection between technological innovation and transport systems – something traditional transport planners don’t always have the skills to understand. By the time I hope to retire, transport systems will be significantly more Shared, Personalised, Automated, Connected and Electric (SPACE) than they are currently, although this transition is already well under way. The decisions we make now will shape the future of transport and when I look back on my career one day I’d like to say that I played my part in helping to bring about this transition and create a better transport network.
Arup is at the cutting edge of understanding how changes in mobility and technology impact cities. This includes working with clients across the world to help them solve their existing issues and be better prepared for future disruption. It also includes investing the company’s own money into co-funded research projects to help gain a better understanding of the future – such as the work done by Arup’s Foresight team.
Transport enables great cities and places! Two thirds of the world’s population will live in cities by 2050 and shaping great transport systems is one of the best investments that a city can make to increase its liveability and attractiveness. There’s no one size fits all approach to creating great transport systems, but cities that have leveraged the opportunities of innovation and technology to help solve problems have come out in front and this trend will continue and accelerate in the future. It is exciting to imagine how new technology may enable better transport systems in the coming decades – but we need to start preparing now to help shape this transition and make it something that helps to create a better experience for people.
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