Skip to main content

A streetcar named...reliable

When Atlanta’s streetcar project had some issues, Siemens helped to solve them – but started out by just listening, says Chris Maynard, the company’s head of rail services. It’s funny how often niggling problems can be a warning sign that there are bigger issues requiring attention – and not so funny how things can escalate if you don’t pay attention to them. With that in mind, Siemens was hired as service provider for the Atlanta Streetcar system - four vehicles operating on a two-mile loop in downtown
June 27, 2018 Read time: 4 mins

When Atlanta’s streetcar project had some issues, Siemens helped to solve them – but started out by just listening, says Chris Maynard, the company’s head of rail services

It’s funny how often niggling problems can be a warning sign that there are bigger issues requiring attention – and not so funny how things can escalate if you don’t pay attention to them.

With that in mind, 189 Siemens was hired as service provider for the Atlanta Streetcar system - four vehicles operating on a two-mile loop in downtown Atlanta – with a remit to enhance vehicle reliability, operational safety and fleet availability.

At the centre of it all is Siemens’ digital rail services platform Railigent, which the company uses to analyse data to help identify high-risk failures before they occur. The companies say this will help the streetcar system reduce its maintenance-related service interruptions for riders, improve vehicle availability – and, of course, reduce costs.

Digital world

The Atlanta Streetcar project provided Siemens with an opportunity to showcase services designed to reduce downtime and improve efficiency. Siemens had just announced its presence in the city on the GeorgiaTech campus by setting up its MindSphere Application Center for Rail, using data gathered from intelligent sensors and “billions of data points” on the US’s rail network to create what it calls an ‘Internet of Trains’.

The company “needed a ‘lighthouse’ project, to put our thumbprint on something”, explains Chris Maynard, head of Siemens Rail Services, North America.

The company “wanted something where we could show enough of a sample size and demonstrate value to the customer”. In this it took some inspiration from Silicon Valley, Maynard enthuses. “In the digital world it’s better to fail fast – and succeed fast,” he says. If it doesn’t work, “stop it and start something else – be innovative”.

The company started talking to Atlanta Streetcar about the issues it faced. The worst kind of service provider, Maynard says, is the one which goes to the potential client and says: “Let me tell you what your problems are!” “A lot of companies don’t realise that customers are smarter than they are in lots of ways. We needed to ask about their problems to understand their needs.”

User experience

On the face of it, the complaints the company faced from their riders seemed fairly minor – yet were obviously impacting their experience of the service. In fact, they turned out to be key indicators of wider problems. One involved the high temperature in the cars themselves – despite the fact that the air conditioning seemed to be working fine - and another main issue was the amount of noise coming from the bell and horn being used as the streetcars made their way through the city. Using Railigent, Siemens checked the operating data to see what was going on. “We found that the doors were staying open exorbitantly long at particular stops,” explains Maynard. “That was putting hot air in.”

But lengthy stops could not explain why the horn was being sounded so often. “The timing of the traffic lights was off,” Maynard continues. “This meant the operator had to warn drivers.” Hence, what seemed like the overuse of the horn was in fact a very reasonable traffic warning system in a congested area – highlighting a broader problem with signal sequencing.

One of the main reasons for employing Siemens for what amounts to pre-emptive checks on the service was so that Atlanta Streetcar could save money through better maintenance. But getting the user experience right can also have a direct impact on the bottom line. “Cost is very important to the company – but so is ridership,” concludes Maynard.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Keeping cyber criminals from your website
    November 10, 2017
    If a hacker can penetrate your website, they can do business as you. Joe Dysart explains how you and your customers may not discover the fraud for some time. In the latest twist on identity theft, hackers are clandestinely taking over business websites - and then brazenly billing visiting customers as if the sites are their own.
  • Enforcement a key part of the road safety solution
    January 31, 2012
    The Partnership for Advancing Road Safety is a new organisation set up in the US to push the national debate on speed and intersection safety, something which hitherto has been absent. Here, executive director David Kelly explains the organisation's work. With moves to address drink/drug driving and the wearing of seatbelts starting to prove successful in the US, the use of inappropriate speed and poor driving at intersections have become responsible for a proportionately greater number of the deaths and in
  • AVs could have ‘huge value’ in inner cities
    June 13, 2019
    Autonomous vehicles (AVs) could have value as the mainstay of inner city transport networks in future. “It’s pure speculation, but we are likely to see more segregated road networks,” said Chris Hayhurst, European consulting manager at MathWorks. For example, level 5 (completely driverless) AVs could simply be used to pick up and drop off people in the centre of a town. “In an inner city where there are no conventional cars at all it could have huge value,” he added. Hayhurst spoke to ITS Internat
  • Manchester seeks smart but not selective transport solutions
    January 25, 2018
    Smarter transport relies on better communications both with travellers and between transport providers. Andrew Williams reports. Inrix’s prediction that the cost of traffic congestion will rise by 63% to £21bn per year by 2030 clearly illustrates that, in addition to the ongoing inconvenience and inefficiency, ongoing gridlock is a significant drain on the economy. It is against this backdrop that a Cisco-led consortium has launched CitySpire, a smart transport programme that uses location-based services a