Over the course of the
20th century, the
automobile rapidly developed from an expensive toy for the rich into the ''
de facto'' standard for passenger
transport in developed countries.
[1] In developing countries where the car culture is less pervasive, the effects of the automobile on society have been to a lesser extent and of a different nature. The development of the automobile built upon the transport revolution started by
railways, and like the railways, introduced sweeping changes in
infrastructure,
manufacturing and
legislation. The wide reaching effects of automobiles on everyday life have been a subject of much controversy. Proponents on one end of the spectrum claim the car is a marvel of technology that has brought about unprecedented prosperity, while opponents on the other end claim it lead to a mode of urban and suburban planning that discourages walking and human interaction, uses large amounts of polluting fuel, and drains urban centers of their populations leading to wide-spread
urban decay and the neglect of once proud and efficient
cities.
[2]
Economic changes

The main reason for the height of these signs is to attract the attention of drivers on the adjacent freeway.
The development of the automobile has caused changes in
city planning, as well as changing the roles of
horses and
railroads.
Industry restructuring
Huge industries devoted only to the automobile were created. Others were expanded from once trivial insignificance to eminent importance. Before the
internal-combustion engine was developed,
gasoline was a waste product, often discarded. Once the automobile became commonplace, the production of gasoline blossomed into a matter of such importance that national governments took action to secure the steady flow of
oil. The
steel industry was already established, but the coming of the automobile created huge amounts of business for it. The
chemical,
rubber, and
petroleum industries were remade to suit the needs of the automobile and industries sprang up, such as
service stations,
motels, and automobile
insurance, that were completely reliant upon the automobile for their livelihood.
As automobiles began to travel at higher and higher speeds, the
sign industry began building larger and larger signs and
billboards to draw the attention of drivers. Some urban areas remain pedestrian friendly with many stores, cafes, and other attractions, yet still have a great deal of motor traffic passing through, and hence billboards atop many business buildings. A pedestrian in these areas is likely not even to notice the billboards, because a pedestrian's attention tends to be focused on the objects in the immediate vicinity.
Infrastructure
Aside from industries, one of the most visible effects the automobile has had on the world is the huge increase in the amount of surfaced
roads. For example, between
1921 and
1941, the United States spent US$40 billion on roads, increasing the amount of surfaced road from 387,000 miles (619,000
kilometers) to over 1,000,000 miles (1.6 million kilometers) which doesn't even take into account road widening.
[3]
With increased road-building came loss of
habitat for
wildlife. Loss of
rural areas and
agricultural land to
pavement has also been extensive. The quality of roads was also improved. Roads were paved with
asphalt, and roads with more than one lane on each side became commonplace.
In addition to federal, state, and local dollars for roadway construction, car use was also encouraged through new
zoning laws that required that any new business construct a certain amount of parking based on the size and type of facility. The effect of this was to create a massive quantity of free
parking spaces and to push businesses further back from the road. Many shopping centers and
suburbs abandon sidewalks altogether, making pedestrian access dangerous. This had the effect of encouraging people to drive, even for short trips that might have been walkable, thus increasing and solidifying American auto-dependency.
[4] As a result of this change, employment opportunities for people who were not wealthy enough to own a car and for people who could not drive, due to age or physical disabilities, became severely limited.
Technological changes
Production
The
assembly line and other methods of
mass production were developed when American businessmen began seeking ways to build more automobiles at a lower price. The idea of using many small identical parts that could be exchanged for each other was engendered by the president of the
Cadillac Automobile Company,
Henry M. Leland. Once other automobile makers realized the value of small identical parts that were interchangeable, they hired many small machine shops to make identical parts that were then put together at assembly plants. Because of this, replacement parts could easily be sent to car owners. This greatly prolonged the life of the automobile, making it even more attractive to consumers.
Ransom E. Olds took the first step towards assembly line production when he had the framework of each automobile pushed on a wooden platform supported by rolling casters.
Henry Ford built on this when he used
conveyor belts to pull along the bare frame of an automobile while workmen added parts to it that were brought to them by other conveyor belts. Ford's utilization of the conveyor belt in the factory was inspired by the Chicago Packing Association's disassembly line, where workers dressed
beef pulled along by an overhead trolley.
Cultural changes
Prior to the appearance of the automobile, horses, walking,
streetcars and
bicycles were the major
modes of transportation within cities. Horses require a large amount of care, and were therefore kept in public facilities that were usually far from residences. The
manure they left on the streets also created a
sanitation problem. The automobile had neither of those disadvantages.
The automobile made regular medium-distance travel more convenient and affordable, also in areas without railways. Because automobiles did not require rest, and were faster than horse-drawn conveyances, people were routinely able to travel farther than in earlier times. Historically, most people never travelled more than a few dozen kilometres from their birthplace in their entire lives ; the advent of the automobile began the transformation of society in such a way that those who had never travelled that distance were only a tiny minority. Some experts suggest that many of these changes began during the ''Golden age of the bicycle'', the preceding era from 1880—1915.
[5]
Changes to urban society

Traffic Jam
Beginning in the
1940s, most urban environments in
United States lost their
streetcars,
Cable cars, and other forms of
light rail, to be replaced by
diesel-burning motor coaches or
buses. Many of these have never returned, though some urban communities eventually installed
subways.
Another change brought about by the automobile is that modern urban pedestrians must be more alert than their ancestors. In the past, a pedestrian had to worry about relatively slow-moving streetcars, or other obstacles of travel. With the proliferation of the automobile, a pedestrian has to worry about being hit by automobiles at high speeds, and breathing noxious exhaust fumes. The
Futurama exhibit at the
1939 New York World's Fair showed a City of the Future in which pedestrian and automobile traffic was fully grade-separated. However, for cost reasons, this vision has never come to pass outside of small-scale
skyways in a few downtowns.
The loss of
pedestrian-scale villages has also disconnected communities. People have less contact with their neighbors and rarely walk unless they place a high value on
exercise.
[6] Also, drivers lose time stuck in
traffic jams, and today people rarely get the recommended amount of exercise to stay healthy. In fact, since the
1980s,
obesity has reached epidemic proportions in the United States.
In areas with high crime rates, people who do exercise usually prefer to do so in the safety of their home or in subscriber-only fitness clubs (which they drive to and from).
Advent of suburban society
Because of the automobile, the outward growth of cities accelerated, and the development of
suburbs in automobile intensive cultures was intensified. Until the advent of the automobile,
factory workers lived either close to the factory or in high density communities further away, connected to the factory by
streetcar or
rail. The automobile and the federal
subsides for roads and suburban development that supported car culture allowed people to live in low density communities far from the city center and
integrated city neighborhoods. The developing suburbs created few local jobs, due to single use zoning. Hence, residents commuted longer distances to work each day as the suburbs expanded.
[3]
Shopping centers were built in or near suburbs to save residents trips to the city. The shopping centers provided goods and services further reducing the need for suburban residents to visit the city.
Finally, as the
service economy gained importance,
business parks appeared, allowing suburb dwellers to work in the suburbs. The automobile caused the
decentralisation of cities, segregating land use and ethnicities, while increasing the
ecological footprint of their residents.
Car culture
The car had a significant effect on the culture of the
middle class. Automobiles were incorporated into all parts of life from music to books to movies. Between
1905 and
1908, more than 120 songs were written in which the automobile was the subject. The automotive themes of these songs reflected the general culture of the automotive industry: sexual adventure, liberation from social control, and masculine power. Books centered on motor boys who liberated themselves from the average, normal, middle class life, to travel and seek adventure in the exotic. Car ownership came to be associated with independence, freedom, and increased status.
Changes to individual lifestyle in America
At the end of the
19th century, Americans put a great deal of emphasis on personal freedom and individual mobility. The automobile encompassed both of these ideals.
Individuality was increased for the automobile owner. This individual zeal didn’t apply to everyone.
Conservative critics felt that the automobile decreased
church attendance, increased
sexual activity, and weakened family unity. A popular religious magazine of the day, the ''Independent'', argued that it took away from even more important things. It argued, for example, that middle class men were prone to delay marriage in order to buy an automobile. It then argued that the automobile led to an augmented
divorce rate, due to an increased stress rate over car payments. Others felt that couples delayed having children or even had fewer children, owing to the expense.
Social status
The automobile signifies much more to many than simply a mode of transportation.
Henri Lefebvre called the automobile "the
epitome of possessions". In the early years, when the first automobiles were imported to
America from
France for the
bourgeois and elite, the car served as a mark of distinction above all others. The automobile rapidly became a symbol of
social status, and in some cases, a fashion item. The automobile, more than almost any other possession, allowed people to flaunt wealth. Not only was the ownership of an automobile demonstrative of a certain level of income and prestige (and still is, especially in poorer nations where the automobile isn't ubiquitous), it is also highly visible.
Recreation
The creation of good roads and dependable automobiles changed
recreation and
vacations. Before the automobile,
resorts were predominantly found near the coast or a railroad. Once the automobile became abundant, resorts sprang up that were off the beaten path. Resorts appeared in scenic places, far away from the hectic life of the cities. In the United States,
national parks became popular tourist attractions and developed designs with automobile travelers in mind.
Safety
Automobile accidents caused many deaths and injuries, especially before automobile safety
laws were implemented. To this date, automobiles remain a major cause of accidental
death and
injury, not to mention emotional
stress.
Car drivers are less vulnerable to
mugging than pedestrians and transit riders, but are naturally vulnerable to
crimes like
carjacking, to
torts like injuries sustained in
car accidents, and to the inconvenience of vehicle breakdowns.
The automobile expanded the role, abilities and efficiency of the
emergency services such as the response to emergency calls for
firefighters or
paramedics.
Political changes
George Monbiot speculates that widespread car culture has shifted voter's preference to the
right of the political spectrum.
[8] He thinks that car culture has contributed to an increase in individualism and fewer social interactions between members of different socioeconomic classes. The growth of the suburbs is also considered an important factor. Suburbs dwellers are more likely to vote conservative than city dwellers.
Since the early days of the automobile, automobile manufactures successfully lobbied consecutive governments to build public roads.
[3] Road building was sometimes also influenced by
Keynesian-style political ideologies. In Europe, massive freeway building programs were initiated by a number of
socialist governments after WW2, in an attempt to create jobs and make the automobile available to the working classes. From the 1970s onwards, promotion of the automobile increasingly became a trait of the
conservative right.
Margaret Thatcher talked of a "great car economy", and increased government spending on roads. Conservative parties often attempt to win votes by promising to defend motorists' rights.
Car-oriented convenience
Many aspects of daily life in the
First World industrialized countries reflect an impulse to make life convenient for car users.
Without having to exit one's car, a resident of a typical large
North American
city may accomplish the following:
★ Buy
gasoline at a
gas station (in the few areas where full service is still available)
★ Have the car
washed
★ Obtain
cash from an
ATM
★ Buy many different kinds of
food and beverage
★ Deposit
mail for delivery by the postal service
★ Drop off
apparel for
dry cleaning
★ Pick up and pay for
prescription drugs at a
pharmacy
★ Return
library books,
videotapes, or almost any other small object that is regularly lent to the public
Environmental changes
For much of the early history of the car, no consideration was given to various environmental effects caused by the automobile. Automobiles are a major source of
air pollution and
noise pollution. The manufacture and use of automobiles makes up 20 to 25 percent
[ World Carfree Network - Some Statistics ] of the
carbon dioxide emissions that are widely believed to be causing global
climate change. There are over 600 million cars and light vehicles (excluding heavy trucks and buses) worldwide,
[10] This is increasing by about 50 million a year. The average car or light vehicle emits approximately 0.2 kilograms of carbon dioxide per kilometre - in terms of volume, that is about 1 cubic metre of carbon dioxide for every 10 kilometres travelled.
With increased road-building came negative effects on
habitat for
wildlife.
New roads built through sensitive habitats can cause the loss or degradation of delicate ecosystems, and the materials required for roads come from large-scale rock
quarrying and
gravel extraction, which often occurs in sensitive ecological areas. Road construction also alters the
water table, increases
surface runoff, and increases the risk of flooding.
See also
★
Mobility
★
General Motors Streetcar Conspiracy
Alternatives
★
Car-free movement
★
Freeway and expressway revolts
★
New Pedestrianism
Effects
★
Externality
★
Pollution
★
Roadway air dispersion modeling
★
Traffic congestion
★
Urban decay
★
Urban sprawl
Social aspects
★
Social status
★
Systemics
★
Social mobility
References
1. ''The ‘System’ of Automobility'' by John Urry. Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 21, No. 4-5, 25-39 (2004)
2. ''Asphalt Nation: how the automobile took over America, and how we can take it back'' By Jane Holtz Kay
Published 1998 ISBN 0520216202
3. ..
4. Lots of Parking: Land Use in a Car Culture By John A. Jakle, Keith A. Sculle. 2004. ISBN 0813922666
5. Smith, Robert (1972). ''A Social History of the Bicycle, its Early Life and Times in America''. American Heritage Press.
6. From Highway to Superhighway: The Sustainability, Symbolism and Situated Practices of Car Culture Graves-Brown. Social Analysis. Vol. 41, pp. 64-75. 1997.
7. ..
8. [1]
9. ..
10. Number of Cars