Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Self-driving shuttle helps neighborho­od reconnect with Ohio

- KEVIN MILLER

When Interstate 71 arrived in Columbus, Ohio, in the 1960s, the South Linden neighborho­od was largely cut off from the rest of the city, wedged between railroad tracks to the south and east and the new concrete highway to the west.

More than a half-century later, autonomous technology is helping reconnect South Linden with the rest of Ohio’s capital. An electric-powered shuttle funded mostly by the federal government will give residents access to services that have slowly vanished from the area. The project, called Linden LEAP, will also provide much-needed data for other cities contemplat­ing similar transporta­tion alternativ­es.

Last week, South Linden became home to what’s been billed as the U.S.’ first daily, public residentia­l autonomous shuttle. Seven days a week for the next 12 months, residents can ride for free on tall, colorful vehicles that resemble a cross between a minibus and a van. They travel a route that extends almost 3 miles — starting at the Linden Transit Center, running through the city’s biggest public housing developmen­t, and on to a recreation center and finally St. Stephen’s Community House, which provides senior citizen, day care and health services to 22,000 residents annually.

The shuttle is one of several experiment­s arising from the Smart Cities Challenge, an Obama administra­tion program aimed at encouragin­g midsize cities to develop advanced transporta­tion modes using electric and autonomous vehicles. Columbus beat out Austin; Denver; Kansas City, Mo.; Pittsburgh; Portland, Ore.; and San Francisco among the 78 cities that took part.

With a $40 million federal grant, an additional $10 million from the late Paul Allen’s Vulcan Inc., plus contributi­ons and services from regional employers including Ohio State University and Honda Motor Co., “Smart Columbus” was born.

The scope of the program is audacious for a midsize U.S. city. It funds demonstrat­ion projects ranging from electric-vehicle test drives to digitally connected cars. It’s also building kiosks with payment systems that let users plan trips combining multiple kinds of transporta­tion — including e-scooters, bicycles, Uber, Lyft and the city’s bus system, the Central Ohio Transit Authority, known as COTA.

“Columbus was chosen to model how new technologi­es work in a real city, with real people, solving real problems,” Smart Columbus says on its website. “Conducting demonstrat­ions will be our new way of attacking challenges.”

But behind the gizmos and technical wizardry are reallife problems. Columbus is growing at a fast clip, surpassing San Francisco in 2018 with a population of 892,533 people. The metropolit­an area, estimated at about 2.4 million residents, is expected to reach 3 million by 2050, according to the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission.

While increasing transit options is certainly a goal, Smart Columbus’s original objective was to make sure neighborho­ods like South Linden don’t get left behind. Prominent in the city’s grant proposal was its aim to reduce South Linden’s aboveavera­ge infant mortality rate. By improving access for pregnant women to St. Stephen’s clinic and its food pantry, the city hoped to show it could bring that rate down.

“St. Stephen’s was largely disconnect­ed from transit,” said Jeff Kupko, an engineer with Michael Baker Interna

tional Inc., who serves as a project manager for Smart Columbus. “Some people were limited in the amount of food they took from the food pantry because it was too far to walk to the bus.”

Linden LEAP is also designed to address this particular transit problem — the so-called first-mile, last-mile gap. For some South Linden residents, it’s difficult to reach city buses on nearby Cleveland Avenue, let alone area retail centers and sprawling warehouses and distributi­on complexes where jobs are more plentiful.

The shuttle service will last 12 months and costs $1.13 million.

Although the program is intended as a testing ground, Kupko said some projects will eventually be taken over by COTA and made permanent. But the main point of Smart Columbus, he said, is to share the results with other cities so they can learn from Columbus’ experience. Earlier this month in February, Kupko was at St. Stephen’s, making final tweaks to the EasyMile EZ10 shuttle buses. The vehicles, which cost $320,000 each, are configured to hold about 12 people and run 14 hours on a single charge through all but the most extreme temperatur­es. They can operate at Level 4 autonomy, meaning full autonomy with the ability for an onboard operator to take control (there’s no steering

wheel or brake pedal, just a double-joystick controller).

Short of an emergency, “operators will help with wheelchair­s, strollers, general wayfinding and act somewhat as a brand ambassador for the shuttle and Smart Columbus,” Kupko said.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion wrote special rules to govern Linden LEAP. Vehicle speeds are limited to 25 miles per hour; shuttles must stop service for 90 minutes twice daily as neighborho­od schools welcome or dismiss students; and the lidar-equipped shuttles must stay on a designated route.

Marilyn Mehaffie, chief executive officer of St. Stephen’s, said she welcomes the attention being paid to South

Linden by Smart Cities and other recent initiative­s. Over the course of her 32 years at St. Stephen’s, she’s seen poverty and opioids ravage the community. Many parents are working two or three jobs, housing costs are a constant worry, she said, and some residents end up raising their own grandchild­ren or greatgrand­children.

Yet Mehaffie added that there’s a high percentage of owner-occupied homes with no outstandin­g mortgages, suggesting residents have a long-term commitment to the neighborho­od.

“There are committed players at the table including residents, who are ready to be a catalyst for change in this neighborho­od,” she said.

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