This is how electric vehicle charging points can be integrated into the urban architecture

This is how electric vehicle charging points can be integrated into the urban architecture

My list

Author | Jaime RamosThe future of urban mobility is electric. The decline of the combustion engine and its gradual replacement with electric vehicles is a revolution that has led to fears over the decade that the pillars of the automotive sector were collapsing. Despite electric vehicle detractors, the change is here to stay and over the coming years, we will see an increase in the market share of plug-in vehicles.This fact is illustrated in numerous indicators: nearly all manufacturers offer these types of models, prices are dropping and, in less than ten years, we have gone from seeing autonomies of less than 100 kilometres to those exceeding 400 kilometres and still rising. The focus on innovation in lithium-ion batteries is at the centre of these achievements.Its consolidation is backed by authorities and institutions including those in countries with major pollution problems, such as China or India. While the Chinese mandatory sales quotas and its emerging industry already exceed one million electric vehicles registered each year, in India they intend to follow that same path

This is how electric vehicles are affecting cities

charging pointThis trend will have a direct effect on cities, reducing air pollution (and acoustic pollution). Likewise, integrating electric vehicles on streets means definitively consolidating charging infrastructures.If there has been a profound debate throughout the decade about whether the transition to electric engines should also mean changing the design of vehicles, that same question has been transferred to charging stations.How should urban spaces incorporate these charging points? At the moment, the tendency is to compact this technology as much as possible to achieve a smarter implementation. However, the best solution is still not clear.

What should a public charging point look like?

To date we have seen hundreds of alternatives and designs for this technology. From wardrobe-sized monstrosities to slender and futuristic totem poles. The size, in the case of charging, is partly related to the number of standards offered by the station (i.e., socket types). A future unification of these would, without doubt, help towards the urban integration of electric charging.In any event, a smart strategy needs to be developed in order to avoid cramming pavements with more unnecessary fixtures. Which is why the number of proposals designed for this purpose are proliferating. In 2013, in New York, for example, they considered the possibility of adapting the almost-extinct phone booths for this purpose.charging pointAmong all the solutions seen in recent years (elevating posts hidden beneath pavements, robotic arms, etc.), most points of the globe coincide in the use of lamp posts. Since, “city lights” are the ideal solution as they use the same electricity supply network.Illumination and chargingThis is one of the most consolidated trends in various cities. Back in 2015,  Los Angeles already included it in its plans to have 28,000 public charging points before 2028. Even more attractive are the systems installed on lamp posts in London by the company Ubicitry or those in Amsterdam. Even manufacturers such as BMW have dared design a similar system.Wireless charging, with all its possibilities, could threaten this model. However, the complicated technology requirements involved, make us think that the smartest way to charge electric vehicles is still via lamp posts. Images | BMW, iStock/Anton Opperman e iStock/nrqemi

Related Content

Recommended profiles for you

EV
Elga Velásquez
Grupo JVF / Apoidea
Co Founder
SB
SAMANTHA BARBERO
& Business Consulting
looking for investors
JM
JOSE MORETA
MDMQ
COORDINADOR TECNICO
JG
Javier Garrido
CENIT-CIMNE
Urban Mobility Researcher and PhD Student in the Port of Barcelona
BJ
Bohdan Jacos
GOSPACE TECH
COO
ZE
zahra eidy
yazd university
Master student in urban planning
MS
Manjula Sendanayake
Colombo Dockyard PLC
Civil Engineer
SG
Simon Goffin
HelloApp
CEO
ÉP
Éllen Pereira
Universidade Federal do Piauí
Undergraduate
ML
Mikel Lasa
KIC INNOENERGY IBERIA S.L.
Sherpa
JS
jorge saraiva
tula labs
ceo
NF
Natalia Noeli Fernández
Demente creativa
Owner
OC
Oscar Chamat
CiudadHub
Co-producer
DT
de Nomazy Thomas
Nextérité
Business Development Manager
CL
Camille Loth
Urbiotica
Product Manager
GC
Guillermo Calderon
GOAL SYSTEMS
Eastern Europe Sales Director
CA
César Argüello
CMEC
Supervisor
LV
Laura Vinagre Garcia
SEAT
Corporate Communications
SF
Sattler Frederic
DB
Partner- and Community Manager \'driversity.de\'
BU
Burcu UĞUR
PİTON R&D
Business Developer