Skip to main content

Cotares adds Parking Tours to its public developer site

Cotares, which specialises in software for navigation and mapping, has added a tool to encourage the development of smart parking solutions to its public developer site. The firm says Parking Tours is designed for the developers of route finding and guidance systems to change their offering from ‘A-to-B’ into ‘A-to-park-near-B’ where on-street parking is available. The company suggests that route guidance can be augmented by an optimised parking search (a ‘Tour’) that adapts to driver preferences, parking
February 7, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

Cotares, which specialises in software for navigation and mapping, has added a tool to encourage the development of smart parking solutions to its public developer site.

The firm says Parking Tours is designed for the developers of route finding and guidance systems to change their offering from ‘A-to-B’ into ‘A-to-park-near-B’ where on-street parking is available.

The company suggests that route guidance can be augmented by an optimised parking search (a ‘Tour’) that adapts to driver preferences, parking probabilities, and the rate at which parking spaces are becoming free.

“The system will guide you to park on-street more quickly and conveniently than the current systems,” Cotares director Alan Jones explains. “Without being explicitly programmed to do so, they mimic the clever strategies that real drivers use, but can use all the information about roads and spaces that parking data companies are beginning to provide.”

Jones says the ‘third generation’ solution is not constrained by routing algorithms but can instead use any legal sequence of roads. It is designed to find the sequence which, on average, will minimise the cost to the driver in terms of inconvenience, search time, walking distance or parking fees – based on the probabilities of finding a free space.

The system is improved by the addition of parking probabilities, regulations and fees from specialist providers such as 163 Inrix, 1692 TomTom and 7643 Here, he acknowledges: “In real use, the Tours would be stitched on to the end of routes already planned by a navigation system, and would form a seamless part of the guidance.”

The developer site allows the quality of the Tours to be tested on a global map, as well as understanding the effects of varying the parameters of the algorithms. “There is no registration required, but feedback is encouraged,” Jones adds.

The site is available at %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external http://developer.cotares.com false http://developer.cotares.com/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • TfL describes reports of closer ties with Uber as ‘nonsense’
    December 14, 2018
    Transport for London (TfL) has described claims that it is deepening its relationship with Uber as ‘nonsense’. Media reports suggested that London’s transit authority might be going to offer customers access to public transport services via the ride-hailing firm's app. The Financial Times reported that Uber is attempting to add TfL's data about tube and bus timetables into the app. But a spokesperson from TfL told ITS International that the only thing it is putting out is open data – and does no
  • RAC Foundation: UK drivers receive 12 million penalties annually
    October 25, 2017
    Up to 12 million driving license holders receive a penalty notice each year – the equivalent of one every 2.5 seconds; meaning as many as a third (30%) of Britain's 40 million drivers now receive a penalty notice annually. The findings come from the Automated Road Traffic Enforcement: Regulation, Governance and Use - for the RAC Foundation by Dr Adam Snow, a lecturer in criminology at Liverpool Hope University. The penalty notices include the Fixed Penalty Notice (a criminal penalty issued
  • ITS Australia: National Awards 2019 nominees
    October 15, 2019
    An autonomous Mobility as a Service pilot at a retirement village is among the nominees in ITS Australia’s National Awards 2019. Aurrigo is exploring how the technology will be used safely by elderly passengers in an environment where technical systems are not well understood. The Queensland Police Service’s forensic crash unit has also been nominated - for using drones to map crash scenes to help reduce road closure times and traffic congestion. In addition, Cooee Busways was chosen for using vehicl
  • Upgrading Koblenz's traffic information system
    March 1, 2013
    David Crawford reviews an award-winning scheme that delivered a 30% increase in website usage – below budget The German Federal Agricul­tural Show (Bundesgarten­schau, BUGA) runs between mid-April and mid-October every other year in a differ­ent city. The most recent, 2011, edition took place in Koblenz, a medium-sized community with a population of just over 105,000 in the Rheinland-Pfalz region, and was expected to draw an additional 40,000 visitors a day to its central area. Traffic access from the moto