Skip to main content

Via’s on-demand bus for Abu Dhabi health workers 

Via has launched an on-demand microtransit shuttle service for medical workers in Abu Dhabi during the coronavirus pandemic.
By Adam Hill April 9, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Abu Dhabi Healthcare Link offers free on-demand buses for health workers

A partnership with transport operator United Trans and the Integrated Transport Centre (ITC) of the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT), Abu Dhabi Healthcare Link is free.

Employees enter a code provided by their hospital in the mobile app, and can book a ride in a 14-seat Mercedes-Benz Sprinter to and from their home and workplace from 6pm-8am – when fixed-route public transport has been scaled back to limit the spread of the disease.

A maximum of six people will be carried per trip, allowing “adequate space for social distancing”, Via says.

The company says its technology picks up multiple passengers “in a seamless flow, allowing for quick and efficient shared trips without lengthy detours”.

“Getting critical staff to work reliably and safely has never been more important,” says Daniel
Ramot, CEO of Via. 

“Digitally-enabled transport services like the Abu Dhabi Healthcare Link can play a key role in allowing public transport to adapt to demand amidst rapidly changing situations.”

The ITC plans to study ridership and will perhaps expand the new on-demand service to 24 hours a day if demand is there.

Via recently launched a similar scheme in Berlin.
 

Related Content

  • December 24, 2012
    Masdar Institute and Abu Dhabi Department of Transport sign MoU
    Abu Dhabi's Department of Transport (DoT) and Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, an independent, research-driven graduate-level university focused on advanced energy and sustainable technologies, has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to establish a collaborative partnership on exchange of information in transportation. The MoU will enable the sharing of information on Abu Dhabi's public transport systems and basic traffic data to be used by Masdar Institute for a research project. The proj
  • January 5, 2023
    CES 2023: Beep, beep! It's ZF's AV
    Driverless shuttle deployed in US to create 'single-source autonomous mobility solution'
  • March 6, 2017
    On-demand is Denver’s command
    While demand responsive transit overcomes many problems, it has been too expensive to provide for the general public but Denver believes it may have found a solution. Cost-efficiently meeting fluctuating passenger levels within available resources can prove a serious challenge for general publicoriented demand responsive transit. There is growing US interest in this mode - as distinct from the already established use of demand responsive transit for specialised needs, such as paratransit for the disabled –
  • June 23, 2020
    Editor's comment: 'Let's be cautious about conclusions from life in lockdown'

    So what have we found so far from life in lockdown? Not commuting has its benefits. Maybe more of us could work from home when technology allows. We all know how to Zoom now.

    What else? The lack of road traffic has given us cleaner air to breathe when we do go out, while more of us seem to be taking to our bicycles.

    Also, we know that what we've been doing across the world for the last few months is economically unsustainable - which is why restrictions are easing in many countries.