The shuttle is one of several experiments arising from the Smart Cities Challenge, an Obama administration program aimed at encouraging midsize cities to develop advanced transportation modes using (among other new technology) electric and autonomous vehicles. Columbus beat out six other finalists—Austin; Denver; Kansas City, Missouri; Pittsburgh; Portland, Oregon; and San Francisco—among the 78 that took part.
With a $40 million federal grant, an additional $10 million from the late Paul Allen’s Vulcan Inc., plus contributions and services from regional employers including the Ohio State University and Honda Motor Co., “Smart Columbus” was born.
The scope of the program is audacious for a midsize U.S. city. It funds demonstration projects ranging from electric-vehicle test drives to digitally connected cars. It’s also building kiosks with payment systems that let users plan trips combining multiple kinds of transportation—including e-scooters, bicycles, Uber, Lyft and the city’s bus system, the Central Ohio Transit Authority (COTA).
“Columbus was chosen to model how new technologies work in a real city, with real people, solving real problems,” Smart Columbus says on its website. “Conducting demonstrations will be our new way of attacking challenges.”
But behind the gizmos and technical wizardry are real-life problems. Columbus is growing at a fast clip, surpassing San Francisco in 2018 with a population of 892,533 people. The metropolitan area, estimated at about 2.4 million residents, is expected to reach 3 million by 2050, according to the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission.
While increasing transit options is certainly a goal, Smart Columbus’s original objective was to make sure neighborhoods like South Linden don’t get left behind. Prominent in the city’s grant proposal was its aim to reduce South Linden’s above-average infant mortality rate. By improving access for pregnant women to St. Stephen’s clinic and its food pantry, the city hoped to show it could bring that rate down. (By May, Smart Columbus plans to have 300 pregnant women enrolled in a program to guarantee they have transportation to prenatal care.)