Posts Tagged ‘how to live without a car. cityhop’

Why the rich bike

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

 

We all know that a bike is an affordable way to move about and for this reason we might expect that it was the transport choice of those without a lot of ready cash.

However according to the Daily Mail, the bike is in fact becoming the transport method of choice for the rich, rather than those further down the earning ladder.

The article goes on, people on lower incomes may be more concerned with the need to earn money than worrying about what constitutes healthy living or about the issue of climate change and how cycling is the greenest option.”

We all know  London Mayor, Boris Johnson  and Prime Minister David Cameron cycle but the article also has pictures of Zara Philips (Princess Anne’s daughter) and even Penelope Cruz on their bike!

Cityhop has plenty of  members who bike and when they need a car they car share! You can live in the city without a car.

How cities encourage car sharing

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010

Robin Chase, founder and former CEO of Zipcar, recently posted a response to the question of how cities can and should encourage the growth of carsharing. Carsharing US reprinted the information; we, at cityhop have edited the highlights relevant to NZ.
1.Parking. Parking ranks right up there as one of the largest variable costs. Robin suggests, “Offer up some parking spaces (municipal lots or on-street) for one year agreements to whichever car-sharing company wishes to bid on them. In the early years, you will likely have only one company bidding, and their bid will be close to zero $/month. As the business gets more established, and as competition enters the market, the value for specific parking spaces to specific companies will rise: the city will enjoy the additional revenue, and more than one company can compete in specific locations (especially if you can offer up more than one space in a location). This seems like the most fair way to both nurture a budding industry, as well as accommodate success and competition.

2. Marketing. “This is very very dear to both starting and existing companies. The city has lots of resources to get the word out to residents at very low cost. Providing this ability, whether the area has one or many competing companies is critical, and keeps the costs of providing the service down. For example, on bus, train adverts, or information mailed out to residents that renew vehicle registrations.”

By telling your residents about car share you are actually telling them about the choices that exist for them to not own a car. Councils should be encouraging this – it means they will have to build fewer roads, car park infrastructure and so on. Enlightened councils around the world get this and see their participation in car share as good for their city, their planning, their community and their residents.

Again, please make sure to offer this service if there is only one company, and quickly accommodate the addition of other competitors as they arise.

3. Taxing, Parking Permits. Remember car share is like a taxi stand or bus stop, or even a loading zone. It is a service to encourage people not to own a car and then have to find a park for it in on already congested streets. Make is easy for people to find car share. In resident permit parking only areas having a car share space may encourage locals to give up their car and their parking space.

4. Geographic carve-outs. Don’t make decisions district by district, carsharing does best when it can scale. And users stand to gain from a large network (i.e. a member can pick up a car from both work or home, without having to join two companies).

Feel free to share this information with your newly elected representative.  This new Auckland Council and the new Green mayor of Wellington City are all talking about initiatives to make our cities liveable. Take a leaf out of leading international cities and support car sharing! Shortly we will load some stories on what Sydney is doing to encourage car share.

 

 

Zipcar’s Scott Griffiths is CEO of Year

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

Corporate Responsibility magazine in the US named Scott Griffiths, the CEO and Chair of Zipcar as CEO of the Year in the ‘social entrepreneur’ category.

On receiving the award in Chicago, Scott said,  “I am humbled by this recognition from CR Magazine. The success of the Zipcar brand clearly demonstrates how a business can ‘do well by doing good.’ Our definition of sustainability is ‘the most efficient use of resources.’ Since each Zipcar removes 15 personally owned vehicles from the road, we help reduce congestion, ease parking demands and lower a community’s overall carbon footprint. I am proud to lead a company that is by definition sustainable,” said Scott Griffith, Chairman and CEO of Zipcar. “I am honored to accept this award on behalf of our 500,000 passionate members who we call Zipsters. Zipsters share our vision of a future where car sharing members outnumber car owners in major cities around the globe.”

Cityhop, is NZ’s own version of zipcar. Like Zipcar, members have access to cars via a smart card. They become members of a car share club and can use cars anywhere in Auckland or Wellington city once they have booked on line and the cars are programmed.

Scott has been CEO since 2003 and has steered Zipcar to be the world’s biggest car share company. In 2007 they merged with Flexcar not long after cityhop launched into Auckland. This year they acquired Streetcar, the UK’s fastest growing car club so they could expand car share throughout the United Kingdom.

Zipcar has helped change urban life by providing instant affordable mobility in 14 major metropolitan areas, 220 college campuses in the United States, United Kingdom and Canda.

If you don’t think you need a car think about joining a car club, find out more about cityhop.

3.5 million relationships end in a car?

Saturday, September 25th, 2010

In today’s NZ Herald is a clip from the Independent by  Katy Guest about the hazards of driving with a loved one.

It’s a great example of what reading the Saturday papers is all about – laughing over your cuppa with your loved one about a shared experience – driving together and disagreeing.

Apparently, research by DSS (The Departments for Spurious Stats) has proven that, wait for it, couple often argue on long car journeys.

One in five has pulled over and told their partner to get out. Most common causes of arguments were getting lost; lousy parking, driving too fast and backseat driving.

As Katy points out, there is no neutral way to ask someone if they have any idea how fast they are driving and that jamming one’s foot on an imaginary brake is probably not the best way to alert your driver to the presence of an obstacle to which they may be oblivious too.

Katy goes on that actually the car is the best place to have an effective argument. For starters neither party can escape, you can’t actually see the expression on each other’s faces since you’re starting at the road and you can’t cry if you are driving. Best of all she points out, “with car bust ups you must come to terms by the time you reach your destination, make up and swan into the campsite/wedding/match feeling united, and grown up.”

Read the link above, and think about how much simpler your life could be without a car!

Cityhop and getting attention

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Anyone know where cityhop can get a REALLLY big box? What a great way to let people know a cityhop car is coming to their neighbourhood so that they can think about selling their car and saving money and using a local car by the hour when then need wheels.

Fewer cars on the road means a cleaner and healthier environment as well as safer streets for kids.

Here is a cool idea, leave a box in a car park with the words on it that soon a car share car will be in this spot and imagine the attention you’d attract.

See what these guys did for Mini,

A clever ad to make it seem as if your Mini will literally arrive in a box -like a special present.

See too this u-tube clip on how people in the Netherlands reacted to the Mini box!

Bus drivers are people too

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Bus lanes – from where I sit in car share, the only people who tend to go in bus lanes are those who want to get somewhere a few minutes more quickly!

Meanwhile in Copenhagen on May 5 this year Mukhtars, the bus driver was going about his daily work which obviously his passengers values.

Watch this amazing u-tube clip to see community in action.

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgOyTNtsWyY

Zipcar plans US float

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

The world’s largest car sharing company, Zipcar, is planning a US stock market float that could raise up to $75m. Reported the Independent, the 10-year-old company filed offer documents yesterday, a month after it dramatically expanded in Britain with the acquisition, Streetcar.

Zipcar pioneered what it called car-sharing, a service that charges an annual membership and rents cars at an hourly or daily rate. The service is successful in markets in which car ownership is lower and parking is scarce and expensive, such as urban areas and colleges. The market has been successful enough that larger car rental companies such as Hertz and Enterprise have started their own rivals.

Zipcar members now number more than 400,000 in 13 major cities and at more than 150 college campuses in North America.

The company has posted losses every year since it was founded and said in a regulatory filing that it also expected losses in 2010. Revenue rose 22.5 per cent to $33.2m in the three months to 31 March, while its net loss widened from $3.0m to $5.3m. If the period had included Streetcar’s results, Zipcar would have posted revenue of $39.6m and a loss of $6.1m.

Car share spirit – people sell their car

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Cityhop has a partner in Oz, Go Get car share. In Sydney and Melbourne Go Get has a great relationship with the council. In Sydney in particular, Go Get, has a number of ‘pods’ car parks with special signs like the one above.

Can you read what is on the post it? Some cool mmeber was so delighted at the new park they left a note, viral marketing in action telling those who stopped to read it and were curious how great car share is.

The ‘post it’ says, “Yay for GoGet! We sold our car for this. 10 members in Hordern St alone. More parking for all.”

That is the spirit of car share – people DO sell their car and can rely on car share to get them places when they need wheels. The result: fewer cars on the road, more spaces for everyone, safer streets, cleaner air, oh and the big benefit, more money to spend!

Have a closer look at what your car is costing you. Car share makes sense if you don’t use your car everyday.

Research by the world’s largest car share company shows that people who join car share reduce their driving by up to 40 per cent.

50 per cent decide to sell one or another of their cars or put off buying a car. People walk, cycle, use public transport more once they car share – why? Beacuse it makes sense.

If the oil spill happened here

Friday, June 25th, 2010

It’s easy when something happens along way from us, like the oil spill, to not really appreciate the full horror and extent of the damage.

Check out this website to get a real sense of how disastrous it would be for our small country and get some perspective about this disaster.

http://www.ifitwasmyhome.com/#loc

Then there are the ohter things we forget, like the fact it was only 40 days ago that there was an explosion on the oil rig, Deepwater Horizon, located in the Gulf of Mexico.

It left 17 injured and 11 men missing and presumed dead.

 Since then oil has been spewing 5,000 feet below the ocean’s surface. Depending on whom you ask this two foot pipe is flooding the gulf with anywhere from 500,000 to 2.5 million gallons of crude oil every day… for 40 days… says the website if the oil spill happened here..

Makes you think… Cityhop hopes it makes a few more people think about how badly they want to get in their car and drive somewhere. Maybe this is the huge environmental lesson we all need to really think about the damage we are doing to the planet by driving?

Food for thought.

Cityhop gets global partner

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Cityhop co-founder Victoria Carter is delighted to announce that Cityhop has its first global car share partner, GoGet car share in Australia.

As of today any Cityhop member can use a GoGet car when they are in Sydney, Melbourne or Adelaide.

Check out www.goget.com.au/

Cityhop, NZ’s car share company and Go Get, Australia’s largest car share company are now global roaming partners. Cityhop car share members in New Zealand can use cars in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. Go Get members can use Cityhop cars in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch without paying a membership fee.

 Go Get was formed 7 years ago by friends Bruce Jeffreys and Nic Lowe. Five years later they won a Telstra NSW Business award. By then they had 5 staff, cars at more than 100 locations and 2000 members.

Today Go Get has 300 cars from Adelaide to Brisbane.

Just like cityhop, their typical members are city types who don’t need a car every day. Instead they are a car share club member. When they need a car they book on line or over the phone whenever they need a car and use a swipe card to access a clean car filled with gas that is permanantly parked in their neighbourhood. No  rego, insurance or maintenance worries.

If you are a cityhop member and are wanting to use car share in Oz, click on the link that will be on our website shortly.