Skip to main content

Bentley acquires pedestrian simulation software firm Legion

Bentley Systems has hit the acquisition trail, buying two digital companies.
October 16, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

The first is UK-based pedestrian simulation software company Legion. Infrastructure software provider Bentley says the acquisition will mean it can improve pedestrian circulation, throughput, and overall safety at the planning stage of the projects with which it is involved.

“Because pedestrian traffic and capacity are major concerns for infrastructure planning and operations, collaborative digital workflows for pedestrian simulation need to be prioritised during design,” explains Santanu Das, senior vice president of design engineering for Bentley.

Legion’s pedestrian simulation application models the interactions of people with each other and with physical obstacles in public spaces, including the way they interact with vehicles at street level.

These can be used with Bentley’s OpenBuildings Designer to consider how pedestrian traffic is likely to behave. Legion founder Douglas Connor says: “Pedestrian flows should be considered fundamental design criteria for infrastructure assets.”

The second of Bentley’s acquisitions is Agency9, a Swedish firm which provides municipalities with city-scale digital twin cloud services for city planning and web-based 3D visualisation. Agency9 already uses the reality meshes created by Bentley’s ContextCapture reality modeling software.

The services dovetail with Bentley’s new iTwin cloud services, which the company says will enable OpenCities Planner to offer more detail to urban planners.

“Our many city users globally have been asking for the useful capabilities which Agency9 has successfully implemented throughout Sweden, to take further advantage of their reality modelling programmes,” says Phil Christensen, Bentley’s senior vice president, reality modelling.

Håkan Engman, CEO of Agency9, says that becoming part of Bentley means that “we can foresee the realisation of our users’ vision to advance from urban planning to improving cities’ asset performance”.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Volvo launches ElectriCity bus project in Sweden
    June 18, 2013
    Buses that glide noiselessly without emissions, that pick up passengers indoors and which are powered by a renewable source of electricity – this will become a reality in 2015, if a new initiative in the Swedish city of Gothenburg is successful. Behind the initiative, known as ElectriCity, is the Volvo Group, in cooperation with the Swedish Energy Agency, the City of Gothenburg, Västtrafik, Lindholmen Science Park and Johanneberg Science Park. The aim is to make buses powered entirely by electricity from r
  • Gothenburg to collect road condition data 
    August 9, 2021
    The municipality is working with ViaPM, Nira Dynamics and the Luleå University of Technology
  • Enforcement suppliers highlight industry best practice
    March 15, 2012
    Major suppliers of enforcement technology highlight the countries, regions or cities that they consider to be leading the way in reduction of road traffic violations. The French government’s ambitious programme of enforcing traffic law violations has proven to be an unrivalled success and is continuing to bring improvements in road safety with innovative enforcement technology.
  • ABB and AWS provide EV fleet management
    May 14, 2021
    ABB and Amazon Web Services developing cloud-based digital solution in Berlin this year