This is a street scene with cars.
The strongly foreshortened trapezoid along the bottom of the scene is the road. The red and yellow lights are receding cars, the white lights are approaching cars, the bluish blurs are streetlights.
Parallel or nearly parallel paths are caused by camera movement, probably over 10 seconds or thereabouts. The paths are not completely parallel because there are three degrees of rotation in the camera movement, affecting different parts of the picture differently.
The nonparallel streaks are caused by vehicle movement.
What's really cool is that you can see some lines that are not solid - they are dotted. Why? Those are turn signals!
It is surely taken with an automatic camera. Undoubtedly, the cameraman went to take a shot but did not realize that the camera's light meter told it to use a long exposure. The cameraman snapped the shutter, then continued about his business, unaware that the shutter was still open. Steady shot, followed by small motions, followed by larger and larger motions as he put the camera away.
The "three main groups of lights" are quite likely all part of one continuous line that passes in and out of the frame as the camera is moved.
BTW, with enough care and attention, you could probably recreate a good approximation of the scene, including car movement, camera movement and duration. I'd start with the streetlights. Since we know they don't move, all the blurring must be caused by camera motion. Once that component is normalized, you'd be able to reconstruct the vehicle motion.
Here is a
Street Scene with vehicle motion, but no camera motion.