Self-driving cars deliver unexpected challenges, says Burns & McDonnell strategist

September 21, 2018  |  Austin Barnes

self-driving cars

City streets filled with safer, automated or self-driving vehicles would come with an unexpected price tag: fewer organ donations because of reduced traffic fatalities, said Julie Lorenz, discussing the promise and paradox of evolving transportation technology.

Julie Lorenz, Burns & McDonnell, IEEE International Smart Cities Conference

Julie Lorenz, Burns & McDonnell, IEEE International Smart Cities Conference

“If you look back in history, it can help you think about the future,” said Lorenz, strategic consultant for Kansas City-based engineering and architectural firm Burns & McDonnell.

Lorenz –– who also serves as co-chair of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce’s transportation Big 5 initiative –– presented her thoughts on autonomous vehicles this week to an audience at the IEEE International Smart Cities Conference in Kansas City.

“When elevators were introduced, folks were really afraid of them,” she said, drawing parallels to the changing face of transportation. “There were elevator operators because people didn’t understand how to just walk in and press a button, but also they liked the human element of somebody managing that.”

As self-driving cars roll into the market, consumers will be faced with a similar challenge: letting go of the human touch behind the wheel — whether that be themselves or a taxi or Uber driver.

“It’s emblematic of how we manage change in our lives — both at a professional level and on a personal level,” Lorenz said of the future. “There are many upsides to automated vehicles. There are some downsides too.”

Behind the scenes, tech jobs could develop to cushion the blow for taxi, bus and ride-sharing service drivers who find themselves put out of work by the developing technology.

The potentially negative implications of autonomous driving range from motion sickness to more congestion as self-driving vehicles more accurately pack into tight spaces on roadways, Lorenz cited.

As the landscape of transportation changes, autonomous driving will be adopted generationally, she said. Millennials are more likely to seamlessly adapt to autonomous driving than older generations, Lorenz added.

“The work that we do, it’s really about people. It’s about trying to make lives better,” she said, her note of encouragement to those who struggle to accept the idea of evolved transportation.

With an intricate infrastructure at play, there’s no definitive date on the horizon for when autonomous driving will park itself as a daily routine, Lorenz said.

Ever-accelerating, reliable driverless tech could cruise into reality as early as 2050, she hypothesized.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Cafe Cà Phê returns to the West Bottoms with second location for KC’s popular Vietnamese coffee shop

        By Tommy Felts | July 11, 2023

        A Cafe Cà Phê satellite location inside 12th Street Post in the West Bottoms is the perfect step for continuing the mission of Kansas City’s only Vietnamese coffee shop, shared founder Jackie Nguyen. Just shy of the one year anniversary of its Columbus Park space, Cafe Cà Phê celebrated the grand opening of its new…

        She wanted to bring her favorite foodie magazine to KC; her mother’s sudden death put this publisher’s plans on the back burner 

        By Tommy Felts | July 7, 2023

        Lauren Cook’s passion for Edible Communities magazine drove her appetite to revive it in Kansas City, she shared, but an unexpected life change has her hoping to hand the publisher’s apron to someone else. Cook purchased the license to publish the city-specific food magazine — each independently run by publishers in metros across the country…

        Her red sauce is dynamite but Ragazza’s owner gives the chef title to her Italian heritage 

        By Tommy Felts | July 6, 2023

        Family is baked into the core of Laura Norris’ restaurants, she shared, from the Italian recipes served at Ragazza in Westport to the brother-sister duo running the new Enzo Wine Bar and Bistro together in the River Market. She opened Ragazza, which now sits at the corner of 43rd and Main streets, in 2013 and…

        Former Independence mayor named interim executive director for LGBT Chamber

        By Tommy Felts | July 6, 2023

        An interim leader was announced Thursday as the Mid-America LGBT Chamber of Commerce forms a search committee tasked with identifying the next full-time executive director for the Kansas City-based business advocacy group. Eileen Weir, who served as mayor of Independence, Missouri, from 2014 to 2022, takes on the interim role July 11 after the announcement…