July 2018 July 2018 | Page 16

INSIDE By Stephen Metzger Managing Director Small Vehicle Resource, LLC [email protected] www.smallvehicleresource.com THE GATED COMMUNITY More on Transitional Vehicle You May Be Seeing in Your Gated Community A recurrent theme in these columns has been the evolution of small vehi- cles and charging systems that could well take place in gated communities and planned municipal communities. Particu- lar articles have covered: • Diverse mobility systems, including on-call vehicle sharing, self-driving, multipassenger vehicles, and the useful- ness of autonomous vehicles in the gated community environment; • Upgraded Level 2 charging systems for individual residences and public access areas; • New types of enhanced electric vehicles that bridge the gap between inside and outside the gates travel needs. In this context, I would like to look “under the hood” of a new vehicle entry, the Baro One and point out some of the significant components that could transform the small vehicle universe, including com- mercially-available, cutting edge retro-fits that can seriously upgrade performance in your personal transportation vehicle (PTV). Innovation adoption as a two-way pro- cess Innovation rarely happens outside the context of forces in the environment that are simultaneously changing and set the stage for the emergence of new products. For example, the frenetic attention being given the development of electric vehicles 16 WWW.GOLFCAROPTIONS.COM and the range of components from drive systems to batteries would not have occurred without the height- ened concern for the environment and the effort to reduce hydrocarbon-derived pollution. On-road electric vehicle development has, in turn, underwritten a huge amount of on-going electric motor research and poten- tial new avenues in battery technology. The complimentary concern for urban congestion, as well as air-born pollution, has spawned intense interest not only in electric-powered vehicles, but also much smaller vehicles, and vehicles integrated into more optimal, smart cities. We are on the threshold of these changes, which are, at the moment being spearheaded by European manufacturers and in European urban environments. As these new products and systems emerge, they will feedback on the whole concept of urban mobility, refin- ing and further augmenting the development of cities of the not-so-distant future. Along the way products will come to the fore that are, in fact, immediately appli- cable to cities and, in particular, the gated community, such as yours, of today. One such product is the Baro One low-speed vehicle and the many refinements it brings to the table. The Baro One as a transition vehicle The Baro One Golf Car is a transition vehicle for a vari- ety of reasons. This new vehicle, developed by Baro Ve- hicles, based in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, U.K., has the following features, which clearly differentiates it from what we know as a “golf car”: • Level 3 autonomy, which means the vehicle, through its sophisticated sensory system and software, is close to being fully autonomous, i.e., self-driving;