Archive for March, 2009

Business embraces car sharing

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Many businesses are joining Cityhop, NZ’s first car share and taking advantage of sharing a car.

“Car share is accepted as one the “missing links” in any urban transportation system especially for a fast-growing urban centre faced with increasingly clogged arteries,” says Victoria Carter, former Auckland City Councillor and now CEO and founder of NZ’s first car share Cityhop.

“Car sharing helps people kick the car-owning habit, without going cold turkey, and offers the financial reward of saving them money,” she adds.

“We have a number of businesses who have signed up to cityhop and encourage their staff to car share rather than taxi. In fact one of our clients has a policy taxi to Newmarket but any further must be a car share journey because of the cost savings.”

“It’s more economical than adding another fleet car and enables a company to really see the true use of the ‘wheels. It is also more sustainable so they can add it to reducing their footprint.”

Car share is the new wave. Since December 2008 at least 5 new car share companies have started up around the world, including two in New York making a total of five for the Big Apple.

Victoria Carter observes that engineers and architects appear to be the fastest to accept a new idea like car share with firms like Maunsell, Ignite and Swan Reilley being early adapters. Isthmus, a leading nationwide urban design and landscape architecture practice joined Cityhop this week.  Director Gavin Lister decided to give up his corporate car park and instead make it available for a Cityhop car park. Says Mr Lister, “At Isthmus we frequently need a car during the day to attend meetings with clients or make site visits.  I use public transport to get to and from work.   “Using Cityhop enables us to encourage staff to walk, cycle or use public transport to get to work while still having convenient access to a car during the day.  Professional service firms generally include travel costs in disbursements, so we are able to pass on the very reasonable cost of Cityhop transport to our clients.   “We expect our relationship with Cityhop to be convenient, economical and a positive move for environmental sustainability.” Maunsell, the engineers, were one of the first company’s to sign up to have a dedicated car share car for their staff to use for business and personal use. The car can be used as ‘emergency wheels and a guaranteed ride home through its travel workplace plan’ and also in place of taxis or less fuel efficient manager’s cars. In addition they also have cityhop cards so their staff can use cars at other sites when their own cityhop car is in use. 

Says, Richard Garrett, NZ Marketing Manager, Maunsell Ltd, “Cityhop offers our staff an easy to use transport option and is showing real leadership in the drive to reduce New Zealand’s carbon-footprint.

 

“Maunsell’s involvement with Cityhop has been an exciting and positive experience. We are supporting a great eco-focused initiative which aligns with our values, ends Mr Garrett.

 “International research (Source US Transportation Board) shows that members shed cars. Over 40 per cent of Zipcar members in the USA decided against buying a car and often ended up selling a car,” says Mrs Carter“Car share members drive less – Car usage by individuals reduced by as much as 50 per cent after they joined car share.  

Cityhop has 20 cars in car parks in the Auckland CBD, Parnell and Newmarket, 2 cars in Wellington and 1 in Christchurch. More cars will be added to the fleet as demand dictates.

 

More on this sharing

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

To save readers the trouble I went and looked for Robin Chase’s  time for co-operative capitalism blog. (see reference to it in the previous blog on what is sharing.)

In this blog Robin explores the concept of  collaborative sharing and how it can work. She points out that Governments should be encouraging and supporting companies who promote sharing and innovation. Cityhop is a great example of sharing assets and maing the  more available to all to share easily.

I love these other examples of creative thinking about use of resources. Look at Mexico and the sharing of streets on Sunday.

Says Robin,”We need to envision collaborative financing (lending circles), collaborative infrastructure (mesh networks), and collaborative consumption (car-sharing). It is time to push this idea and approach as far as it can go. A way to think about this approach is “cooperative capitalism.”

“Here is the formula:
1. Identify excess capacity.
2. Build a platform for others to share/engage with this excess capacity.
3. Appreciate unanticipated benefits

Her favourite example at a city level is Bogota’s Ciclovia:
1. The Penalosa brothers (Mayor Enrique and Gil, Head of Parks & Recreation) noted that on Sundays traffic throughout the city was very light.

2. Every Sunday from 9am to 2pm, more than 72 miles of roads are closed to car traffic and open to pedestrians and bicyclists. Tens of thousands of residents get out and use the ‘new trails and paths’ every week. Cost to the city for this highly prized and transforming resource? Just the cost putting up and taking down the barriers.

3. Unanticipated benefits include a healthier population, a stronger community, and increased bicycle use every day of the week.

Robin’s favorite opportunity at a city & national level
“1. The wireless devices being used for open road tolling (and in the future for congestion pricing and road pricing) cost about $28, are single purposed, closed, and in active use for about 30 seconds a month. That is a lot of excess wireless capacity!

2. Create an open source mesh (ad hoc peer to peer) communications platform that would turn the device in the cars into nodes (routing and repeating data bits). The software could also be used in all wireless devices (laptops, cellphones, pdas, traffic lights, smart utility meters, etc.), creating a mobile internet (collaborative infrastructure). Each person will have paid for his/her own device (collaborative infrastructure financing).”

for more on Robin Chase – see her musings…..

What is sharing all about?

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Robin Chase is one of those amazing thinkers like Malcom Gladwell who challenges us to open our minds.

We at Cityhop , NZ’s only car share company offering cars by the hour, are huge fans of her thinking and always are stimulated by her work. The interesting thing about Robin is she obviously never stops thinking. We read about her early fears around the word ‘sharing’ when she first set up the visionary Zipcar. Zipcar rents cars by the hour and is now Amercia’s largest car share company.

 Her staff were reported to be banned from using the word car share because she felt people didn’t like the concept. She claimed it made people feel like they were being told off. “You should share more,” and so on.

She pointed out hotels didn’t call what they did as ‘bed sharing’. They called it ‘hotels.’

She is still thinking about this word ‘sharing’ and recently Robin gave a speech in Seattle ( actually it could be around now) She put some of her talk on the blog (see the link above).

Robin talked about two types of sharing: simple and distributed.

1. Simple sharing: (personal) stuff we share with trusted friends, eg food, books, spare beds, perhaps even the car. Corporate sharing for exmaple like- hotels – formalising bed sharing, libraries – sharing books and car sharing. When looked at in this light – car sharing isn’t that innovative!

And 2. Collaborative and distributed sharing  which in  a personal way is where people share stuff with just about anyone – eg Facebok, Flickr, couchsurfing.

It is a much less predictable way of sharing and requires much less ‘stuff’ than if evyerone had to own their own says Robin.

The rate of return on investment is reduced which means it can grow more quickly often since threshold to participation is lowered. Collaborative sharing is also possible in a corporate world she argues. The critical aspect is to think about not only the assets ( and where there is excess capacity) and the demand for them but also to think about the platofrm and how it enables participation. With new technology this should be easy…

Be interesting to see how this is developed.

5 ways to Save water and save the world

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Cityhop, NZ’s first car share company came into being because we want to see less cars on the road. We recognise sometimes you need a car so car sharing for those trips is not only economical but sustainable transport. Fewer cars on the road means few contaminates and nasties in our waterways. So cityhop is a great fan of another new initiative, WORLD WATER DAY tht was on March 22 2009.

We are very lucky in New Zealand, we have a lot of good, clean drinking water. In fact, we have so much water that we can take it too much for granted. It’s only when you are on a water tank that you are forced to think about how much water we consume. We, at cityhop, try to think like that all the time.

World Water Day is the chance for us all to think about where does our water come from and to treat it as a finite and precious resource.

Only 2.5 per cent of the water on the planet is fresh water. Of that 2.5 percent only 1 per cent is available for us all to use. Our planet’s population is currently just over 6 billion. By 2025, it’s expected to be around 8 billion yet it is unlikely that we will have more fresh water.

In the past year. we in Auckland, have used  2.5 million cubic metres less water – that’s enough water to fill over 1000 olympic swimming pools.

What surprised us was that we only drink 5 per cent of the water we use. I’ve always thought it a bit silly that we have such good drinking water being used to wash clothes and flush the toilet!

There are a lot of things we can do to save water. Victoria  Carter, Cityhop’s CEO, is currently looking at getting a Gutterwitch – it collects and reuses water when connected to a water collector. Then she can water her new vegetable garden with it!  The Central Leader (and probably other Suburban Newspapers) has an ad in this week’s paper with a special discount offer for Gutterwitches, water savers and even pea straw to mulch soil.

Five other ways to save money are:

  1. Fix leaking taps.
  2. My pet hate – TURN off the tap when you clean your teeth. You don’t need to waste all that water!
  3. Wait till you have a full load before you do the washing.
  4. Get a rain barrel to collect water for the garden. (and look at a Gutterwitch)
  5. Mulch your garden and potted plants so you don’t need to use so much water.

Food Miles or food myths

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

With celebrity chefs telling tv viewers to buy local food as a way of being more sustainable thank goodness for someone debunking one of the myths. 

 A Lincoln University Professor Caroline Saunders found that lamb raised in New Zealand and shipped  17,840 km (11,000 miles) to England produced 688 kilograms of carbon-dioxide emissions per tonne, about a fourth the amount produced by British lamb. This is partly because pastures in New Zealand require less fertilizer than most English grazing land. Read more about this in www.nzherald.co.nz Chris Barton on Homegrown Dilemma.  So much for sustainable. If people are really concerned about their impact on the environment, try driving less! Driving  a car not only contimates the air and waterways (from brake material and dust being left on the road eveyr time one brakes – then when it rains this goes into our waterways poisoning them)  but the petrol used to power our cars is a precious resource, has to shipped here, refined, and then once in our cars pollutes the air adding to our carbon foot print. Think about whether you need to drive every journey. Car share members do this. Car share members all over the world drive less, exercise more and save money! Better still, car share research all over the world reports that every car share vehicle is taking up to 20 privately owned cars off the road, thereby contributing to a more sustainable planet. Find out more about NZ’s first car share company, cityhop.  Cityhop car share cars are eco-friendly. We’ve done the research for you and found cars that are not only small and efficient but use very litte petrol. Find out more on our website.

Amazing car share members -Warwick Broadhead

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Cityhop has some amazing members who car share because they care about being environmentally friendly and they like to save money! Warwick Broadhead is one of them!

Warwick has a production, The Resting Show about to begin. See details below. There will also be a screening of the movie about him.

Warwick is an extraordinary person. The Herald did a huge feature on him last year. Click on the link or read below what Peter Calder the herald review had to say on his blog. 

 Says Peter Calder the reviewer of the film on Warwick, “Anyone lucky enough to have witnessed (or, luckier still, taken part in) a Warwick Broadhead show will find this portrait of the artist irresistible; anyone else will find it mystifying – but may not be immune to its many fascinations.

“Habicht, the director describes this film in a secondary title as “a documentary performed by Warwick Broadhead” and that’s apt: before the camera, the artist recalls, re-enacts, re-interprets and wrestles with episodes of his own life. Often he adopts alter egos for the purpose: there’s a marvellous moment when he says: “I was in one of Warwick Broadhead’s shows – I couldn’t understand it, but the costumes were great”. But there are also intensely first-person revelatory monologues about growing up in a brick house in Mt Roskill, about family tragedies and the guilt and pain they left behind.

Bookings for The Resting Show are now open!.The three-week season of 12 performances in all starts on Thursday 16th April and runs until Sunday 3rd May 2009 with limited seating at each show. Tickets are all one price only $25 and you can either book by phone: (09) 838 4455, ext. 214; or by email bookings@ceac.org.nz. You can also visit us at Corban Estate (426 Gt Nth Rd, Henderson) and purchase tickets from the Gallery shop (opening hours 10am-4.30pm 7 days per week).

On Friday 3rd April at 7.30pm join us at the fundraising screening of the highly acclaimed documentary about Warwick, Rubbings from a Live Man directed by Florian Habicht, (Kaikohe Demolition and Woodenhead). If you have missed seeing this documentary, then this is your opportunity. The special viewing will be accompanied by a rare opportunity to hear Warwick discuss the making of the documentary and his latest production The Resting Show. Tickets are $30 and this includes nibbles and wine. Bookings are advised. Phone 838 4455 or info@ceac.org.nz . All proceeds will go to The Resting Show production.

E-waste and cleaning up the city

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Cityhop is a keen advocate for being sustainable and loves supporting those who are doing their bit for the planet and especially the city.

 We read about Grey Lynn 2030 and how its members Kim and Lynn are organising an e-waste day so old computer equipment can be recycled and not end up in our landfills.

Go girls! Visit www.greylynn2030.co.nz for more information.

And good on Woolworths Grey Lynn for getting involved and allowing people to take their old computers to the supermarket on Saturday between 9 am and 3 pm so that the equipment can be disassembled and parts recycled.

Grey Lynn 2030 is a community group involved in a number of projects aimed at creating a sustainable local community by 2030.

Perhaps we should introduce them to cityhop, NZ’s environmentally friendly car share service ! Car share is thriving amongst similar communities in the United States. In fact car share grew from small communities in America coming up with a scheme of sharing a car together rather than a whole lot of individuals owning a car and barely using it.

Car share members drive less which means cleaner air but also less fuel so more oil staying in the ground!

Government departments walks the car share route with cityhop

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

Cityhop is delighted that the NZ Transport Agency, the merged Transit and Land Transport has joined Cityhop.

Staurt Jamieson, NZTA Manager of corporate support says, “Cityhop was a good fit for us, as one of the key objectives of the NZTA is promoting sustainable transport, and being a cityhop member is one way for the agency to show it’s walking the sustainable transport talk.”

“Cityhop also appealed because it provides on-demand environmentally friendly low cost transport, that is a genuione alternative to NZTA staff to using a company vehicle or taxi.”

Says Cityhop founder, Victoria Carter,”We know from overseas experience that combining car share with the public transport network is the key to getting more cars off the road at peak times.”

Cityhop members access cars via a swipe card. Members can join on line from $75.00 and rent for as little as $3 an hour based on a $75 daily hire that includes PETROL, insurance, maintenance and so on.

Cityhop cars are environmentally friendly Mitusbishi i-cars (estimated 5.4L/100km) and Daihatsu  Sirions (estimated 6.0L/100km).

Ends Victoria Carter, “It is great when responsible government departments show such leadership by supporting NZ’s first car share company, cityhop. The more Government departments with their large number of employees support alternatives to car ownership the more chance we have of reducing congestion in our large cities and cleaning up the air and water ways. The by-product is a healthier city. Car share has been proven to have many other benefits. Members walk or bike more, drive less and of course they save money! ”

Find out how cityhop can save your firm or your back pocket money today!

bFM and Cityhop

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Sustainable Simon of bFM recently interviewed environmentally friendly car share Cityhop founder, Victoria Carter.

Sustainable Simon  talked to Victoria about the concept, how it works, how easy it is and whether it would save money.

Victoria offered listeners a special joining offer.

 Listen to the podcast on

http://www.95bfm.com/default,190499.sm