Skip to main content

Montreal’s buses to get GPS and real-time information

Bus passengers in Montreal will soon be able to plan their journey using real time information, making trip planning easier and reducing frustration over late buses. The Société de transport de Montréal (STM) has approved a US$93 million contract to equip its 1,900 buses with a system, called iBus, that monitors the location of buses using GPS and relays that data to users via the web and smartphones.
September 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Bus passengers in Montreal will soon be able to plan their journey using real time information, making trip planning easier and reducing frustration over late buses.

The 4335 Société de Transport de Montréal (STM) has approved a US$93 million contract to equip its 1,900 buses with a system, called iBus,  that monitors the location of buses using GPS and relays that data to users via the web and smartphones.  

Display screens and speakers will be installed on buses to announce the next stop.   Screens featuring the time of upcoming buses will also be installed at busy bus stops and some metro stations.

511 INIT, a German firm with offices in Montreal, will supply and install the GPS technology, software, speakers and screens, as well as new two-way radio equipment for bus drivers. Installation is to begin in late 2014 and will take about two years to complete, said STM spokesperson Odile Paradis. The system will be phased in as installation progresses.

At the moment, the STM only provides scheduled bus times to passengers, via its website, smartphone apps and printed timetables. With iBus, “passengers will know, in real-time, when the bus will come,” Paradis said. “If there’s a schedule change, or if the bus is late because of a fire or some other reason, we can alert people.”

Many other cities, including Laval, have installed such systems to encourage people to use public transit by making trip-planning easier and reducing frustration over late buses.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Real-time traffic updates to be displayed on London buses
    August 16, 2016
    The iconic London bus is now helping to improve traffic in the Capital as Transport for London (TfL) starts a trial of displaying live traffic information on the back of buses. A number of buses on route 344 are displaying real-time traffic information using digital information boards in what is said to be a world first. The technology is being trialled on buses between Clapham Junction and Liverpool Street to provide London's drivers with a new source of information to help avoid congestion and improve
  • Low public transport usage solved by BusPlus journey planner
    July 31, 2015
    BusPlus, a ‘hub and spoke’ off-peak public transport option designed by National ICT Australia (NICTA), will be featured at the 2015 ITS World Congress. NICTA claims this service is particularly beneficial during off-peak times, when public transport is frequently inefficient, poorly utilised and expensive to deliver.
  • Indra to manage traffic at seven tunnels in Colombia
    November 13, 2019
    Indra is to deploy its Horus traffic management platform to control seven tunnels and open-air roads in Colombia.
  • Introducing the Citymapper Smartbus
    May 9, 2017
    In coordination with Transport for London (TfL), which released open data for the project, Citymapper is testing a Smartbus service for London, which it says could reinvent the bus and improve mobility in congested cities. Starting on 9 and 10 May and running on an experimental route around Blackfriars and Waterloo Bridge, Smartbus uses a smaller vehicle, which Citymapper believes is necessary in crowded cities. It runs on a fixed route and uses bus stops. The bus has a smart display to inform passengers wh