PILOT FOR EQUITABLE ELECTRIC MOBILITY: Smart Charging, Smart Parking, and METRO Pass System
Lead PI:
Bruce Race
Co-Pi:
Abstract

This S&CC project in southwest Houston establishes a collaborative process with community and commercial technology partners with an overall aim to leverage early Electric Vehicle (EV) adopter regional markets to accelerate equitable development of accessible fast charging infrastructure and EV ownership for low income families. The novelty of the project lies in a community-driven participatory approach that integrates both social and technical dimensions bringing transformational change to EV ownership and electrification of smart public transportation. This will be achieved by a data-driven model that integrates of real-time data for micro-transit, fixed-route transit, and carpooling services can predict and overcome the uncertainties of traffic conditions resulting in uncertain travel times and poor reliability. An engaging process establishes collaborative relationships, identifies adopter indicators, and incentives for equitable EV ownership and transit ridership. The project will result in a templet and framework for implementing smart transit hubs that can be reapplied at other Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County (METRO) facilities or to other transit systems as best practices.

Greater access to new electric mobility technologies requires reduction in economic barriers to EV ownership and transportation services. Communities need to proactively plan for transportation technologies to improve the lives of low-income communities while lowering emissions, increasing transit use, and reducing congestion. The intellectual merits include application of emerging data analytics, smart technologies, and machine learning to tackle a national challenge of equitable access to EV ownership and electric mobility. The project builds a model using artificial neural networks to capture complex, non-linear phenomena and parameterize data for real-time decision making. The broader project impacts include developing a digital ecosystem and incentive programs reflecting the national need to stimulate equitable access to EV ownership; regional policy impact demonstrating collaborative partnerships between cities, EV companies, fast charging developers, and ridesharing services; and research that opens up opportunities to use the data for EV impacts on the energy grid and future smart grid research. This project will identify how the deployment of smart technologies can improve the reliability, comfort, and affordability of transit services.

This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

Bruce Race
In 2015, Dr. Race joined the Gerald D. Hines School of Architecture as Director of University of Houston’s newly created Center for Sustainability and Resiliency (CeSAR). He serves as the College’s representative to University of Houston’s Research Deans Committee, is a UH 2018 50 in 50 Scholar, and a UH Energy Fellow. His sponsored research includes National Science Foundation grants for intelligent transportation systems and community resilience. In Houston, CeSAR has assisted in developing strategies for flood-resilient neighborhoods and energy-positive mixed-use development including the first Habitat for Humanity mixed-use town center in the US. The master plan for Houston Habitat for Humanity Robins Landing Town Center received the 2021 APA Texas Gold Award for Resilience. His net-zero master plan for the 143-acre Ruffino Hills landfill site in Southwest Houston has received a 2022 APA Houston Gold Award for Resilience. Bruce Race is the principal and founder of RACESTUDIO and is responsible for all aspects of project planning, design and delivery. Since founding RACESTUDIO in Berkeley, CA in 1994, his projects have received 33 design and planning awards including national awards from the American Institute of Architects, American Planning Association, Environmental Protection Agency and Society of College and University Planning. The Long-Range Development Plan for UC Merced received a national 2012 AIA COTE Top Ten Green Projects Award, and the Owings Award for Environmental Excellence, from the California Architectural Foundation in 2013. The Downtown Plan for Estes Park, Colorado received a Colorado APA Planning Award for Community Resilience in 2018.
Performance Period: 09/01/2021 - 08/31/2022
Institution: University of Houston
Award Number: 2126633