Skip to main content

New traffic modelling software release

TSS-Transport Simulation Systems has announced the release of Aimsun 7 which takes the previous version's ability to integrate static traffic assignment, microscopic and mesoscopic modelling and then ramps up the concept of integration to a whole new level with the introduction of the hybrid simulator. TSS claims this eagerly awaited tool has long been at the top of the traffic modelling wish list and allows users to model large scale networks mesoscopically while zooming in microscopically on any areas tha
January 31, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
TSS-Transport Simulation Systems has announced the release of 16 Aimsun 7 which takes the previous version's ability to integrate static traffic assignment, microscopic and mesoscopic modelling and then ramps up the concept of integration to a whole new level with the introduction of the hybrid simulator.

TSS claims this eagerly awaited tool has long been at the top of the traffic modelling wish list and allows users to model large scale networks mesoscopically while zooming in microscopically on any areas that require greater granularity.

At a deeper level, TSS says that the advent of hybrid simulation marks a sea change in how traffic models will be conceived. "Whereas models were previously used once and then discarded, the hybrid makes it possible for the first time to build demand models on a larger and larger scale using a single package," said managing director of TSS-Transport Simulation Systems Jaime Ferrer. "There's no cumbersome manual interfacing between macroscopic and microscopic models and no need to be updating and revising separate models with independent networks and databases. Now you can consolidate your traffic planning modelling in one multi-purpose, multi-layer simulation suite. New models will be built to last."

For a free Aimsun 7 demo, visit %$Linker: External 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.aimsun.com www.aimsum.com false http://www.aimsun.com/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tinynode shows vehicle detection solutions
    March 20, 2018
    Tinynode is showcasing its high-accuracy wireless vehicle detection solutions for smart parking, based on purpose-built, lowest-power electronics and a multi-hop, self-configuring, self-healing, mesh radio protocol. Thanks to patented technology that provides over 99% radio communication availability, 98% detection accuracy, and up to 10-year battery life, Tinynode A4 and B4 sensors prove a simple, cost-effective and reliable way to detect if a parking space is occupied by a car. Sensors are fixed onto
  • Ver-Mac expands into software
    May 22, 2012
    Already an established leader in building portable signage and sensor hardware, Ver-Mac is focusing on building the integration software side of its business. Now a turnkey solution, Ver-Mac offers a complete Smart Workzones solution that includes hardware and the company’s Jamlogic software.
  • Migration isn’t just for the birds!
    May 1, 2012
    Leveraging a rich 25 year history of producing traffic equipment and software, McCain will use the ITS America Annual Meeting & Exposition as a platform for underscoring the vital role of a proper migration strategy in helping agencies migrate to modern, feature-rich, traffic management systems. The company will focus on helping agencies understand and create a migration path for achieving optimum efficiency of their transportation network today and tomorrow. It will provide attendees with a hands-on opport
  • Electric cars merely a green Illusion, according to new environmental book
    June 12, 2012
    Hybrid and electric cars are neither clean nor green according to a new environmental book, Green Illusions, written by University of California - Berkeley visiting scholar Ozzie Zehner. It exposes numerous hidden side effects of new hybrid and electric cars. The analysis considers mining impacts, toxins, energy use, suburban sprawl and carbon footprints of production. From an environmental perspective, Zehner argues that hybrids and electric cars are no better than conventional internal combustion engined