Carpool
Encyclopedia : C : CA : CAR : Carpool
Carpooling (also known as ride-sharing or, in the UK, lift-sharing and even, confusingly, as car sharing), is shared use of a car, in particular for commuting to work, often by people who each have a car but travel together to save costs. There are sometimes special facilities for carpoolers, including designated pick-up points and high-occupancy vehicle lanes which are also at time opened up to designated cars with multiple riders. Carpool projects have been around in fairly structured form going back to the mid-seventies, and in recent years have begun to make much more extensive use of the internet and software support systems. With the recent advent of mobile phones and SMS, there is a push to integrate these technologies into more flexible systems on the web.
Ride sharing is also an excellent idea to get to and connect with people at other large events, such as music festivals and conferences.
Carpools may be formed through word of mouth by friends and colleagues, or through online carpooling services.
Advantages
- Carpools save money. When one shares a car/vehicle with other commuters he or she saves on fuel cost, parking cost and vehicle maintenance cost.
- Carpools decongest roads
- Carpools reduce pollution & CO2 emmisions thereby reducing global warming.
- Carpools may provide social connections in an increasingly disconnected society. New online carpooling services are offering new ways to make social connections through Drupal discussion sites and custom ridesharing services.
- Some larger carpools offer “sweeper services” of late pick-up options for people having to stay longer at work. One form of backup is an arrangement with a local taxi company.
- Starting to look a lot more promising, in part as successul projects grow in number and improve in quality and robustness -- and in part due to their excellent fit with mobile telephony and location systems. This last however is still to be demonstrated sufficientely to provide the new working model which will we can be sure shortly emerge.
Disadvantages
- Drivers carry the additional burden of potential legal action from passengers in case of an accident.
- Carpooling combines many of the disadvantages of public transportation (lack of privacy, not on-demand) with the disadvantages of the automobile (low safety, high fuel consumption).
- Tends to be rather complicated to organise seriously -- and famously difficult to keep together, due not least to changing travel patters and needs.
See also
Links
External Links
Disambiguation Links
- [CARPOOL] Texas A&M designated driver program.
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