Periodic Reporting for period 2 - INDIMO (Inclusive digital mobility solutions)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2021-07-01 do 2022-12-31
The overall aim of the INDIMO project was to extend the benefits of the new and emerging digitally interconnected transport system to people who currently face barriers to using such systems due to the limited physical or cognitive accessibility to the digital interfaces or socio-economic barriers. INDIMO digital mobility toolbox was co-created to help stakeholders to (re)develop and deploy more accessible and inclusive digital transport system, which is usable and accessible to the widest range of people while catering for individual needs and offering personalised mobility options.
We also identified the barriers and drivers of developing digital mobility and delivery services from the point of view of developers, operators and policy makers. 22 stakeholders were interviewed as part of 10 deployment case studies covering car- and ridesharing, bike sharing and micro mobility, smart deliveries, multimodal route planners and mobility as a service. We identified the barriers and drivers of developing digital mobility services. They are related to the market position of the services, the regulatory framework in place, the integration of the service into the public transport service network, the diversity of the vulnerable-to-exclusion groups, knowledge about the vulnerable groups, the level of user involvement (co-creation), the fast evolution of digital mobility services and the availability of local support for ensuring accessibility and inclusiveness, communication and collaboration between stakeholders.
Afterwards, these insights have been used to co-create the INDIMO digital mobility toolbox that enables stakeholders to (re)develop and deploy more accessible and inclusive services by providing guidelines, recommendations and examples of best practices. This toolbox consists of 4 components: a Universal design manual, a Universal interface language, a Cybersecurity and personal data protection guidelines and a Service evaluation tool. All of these tools were co-created by engaging end users, operators, developers and policymakers via co-creation workshops, communities of practice sessions and semi-structured interviews and tested in real-life on the (re-)development of five digitally enabled pilot services (smart delivery box, smart traffic lights for visually impaired pedestrians, on-demand ride sharing, informal ridesharing and digital platform enabled bicycle delivery service). With the help of the INDIMO tools, mobility service operators, developers, policy makers and urban and rural planners will be able to co-create solutions and design strategies necessary for reducing digital exclusion from mobility and logistics services, thereby extending the promised benefits of these services to all sections of the society. Since the INDIMO tools have universal design principles at the very core of their development process, with little adaptations these tools may also be extended to other forms of digital and non-digital mobility services.
In the next stage of the project, these guidelines have been tested and validated in five pilot projects (Madrid, Emilia-Romagna, Galilee, Berlin, Antwerp) where developers and operators applied the recommendations to (re)develop existing services or deploy new ones. These pilots provided feedback to the tool development based on their evaluation. The pilot projects addressed both inclusion and access to digital personalised on-demand mobility services in different contexts and service models: introducing digital technology to enable e-commerce in rural areas in Emilia-Romagna (Italy), designing inclusive traffic lights for pedestrians in Antwerp (Belgium), co-creating an inclusive informal ride-sharing service in an area with ethnic minorities in Galilee (Israel), testing and improving the users’ and the couriers’ experience to deliver goods and food to people with mobility and time constraints issues in Madrid (Spain), testing a safe ride-pooling service with emergency safety button in Berlin (Germany).
Eventually, the project produced the final versions of the tools in the INDIMO Inclusive Digital Mobility Toolbox including the Universal Design Manual for digital transport services, Universal Language Interface Icons for transport services, Guidelines for cybersecurity and personal data protection and the INDIMO Service Evaluation Tool.
The project succeeded in raising interest in and attention to the inclusivity and accessibility issues that digital mobility and delivery solutions are raising. This was achieved by involving stakeholders from policy makers, service and software developers, service operators and users to co-create the INDIMO Inclusive Digital Mobility Toolbox. The INDIMO Co-creation Community and the local communities were practice are good partners in these efforts.