Skip to main content

On-demand transport for Reykjavík airport

The Routing Company has partnered with Icelandic national operator Bus4U
By Adam Hill May 31, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The new Bus4U service provides on-demand home-to-work transportation for 2,000 employees at the airport (© Taras Bodnar | Dreamstime.com)

Public transit routing specialist The Routing Company (TRC) is partnering with Icelandic national operator Bus4U, to provide on-demand transport around Keflavík International Airport.

Launching next week, this is the first time TRC’s Pingo app and platform will be available in Iceland.

The airport serves the capital Reykjavík, around 50km away, and the new Bus4U service provides on-demand home-to-work transportation for 2,000 employees at the airport, including those from airline Icelandair and airport operator Isavia.

“With a focus on extending existing transport networks and building greater flexibility into modal options, local employers and Bus4U have chosen to unleash the best of what our products can deliver,” said Dami Adebayo, director of partnerships at TRC.

"We are providing a sustainable alternative to car use, and improving the daily commuting experience through flexible, responsive, and convenient shared buses.”

TRC’s Ride Pingo mobile app and Pingo products will provide on-demand trips, with booking and dispatching completed by TRC’s Pingo Dashboard operations management tool. 

It will provide service when fixed transport lines are not in operation and will use TRC’s Pingo Journey and Pingo Venues features, the latter of which directs drivers and riders to convenient pick-up and drop-off locations, and allows fleet managers to route all requests to specific points within the service area.

“We believe this will be a groundbreaking service for airport employees and it will open up other opportunities to provide on-demand transport services in Iceland,” said Sævar Baldursson, Bus4U chief executive officer.

Related Content

  • February 16, 2021
    How to win over car owners to public transit
    Public transportation agencies need to look at what private sector firms like Amazon and Netflix have offered their customers, argues Bonnie Crawford of Cubic Transportation Systems
  • February 5, 2018
    Fluor chosen for LA International Airport Automated People Mover
    Fluor Corporation (Fluor) has been chosen to lead the design-build joint venture team to operate and maintain the Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) Automated People Mover project for the Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA). It aims to provide passengers and employees with reliable and time-certain access to the airline terminals with the design and construction commencing later this year. The passenger service is scheduled for 2023.
  • November 26, 2013
    US favours express buses are for intercity travel
    David Crawford records an upsurge in ground travel. Express buses are powering ahead of air and rail as the US’ most-favoured form of intercity travel and major operators are investing in passenger-attracting and retaining technologies. At the same time ‘kayak’-style price comparison websites are emerging to widen rider choice. Modelled on airline industry search engines that find cheap flight deals by comparing carriers’ offers, these new websites aim to fill the same gap for a ground-travel equivalent
  • May 27, 2014
    Connecticut Transit uses web feedback to improve user experience
    Connecticut champions open government and open data to help fostertransparency, accountability and citizen engagement – and that includes transportation matters as Andrew Bardin Williams discovers. The last thing anyone wanted was to inconvenience or displace others - least of all people who lived and worked in the neighbourhood. Yet, workers in an office building in downtown New Haven, Conn., were tired of shuffling through hoards of people who kept sitting on the stoop to the building while waiting for th