Skip to main content

Compass4D second meeting examines Danish ITS bus project

Following its successful first meeting in Spain earlier this year, the Compass4D consortium met for the second time in Copenhagen to plan forthcoming work and to participate in a joint workshop with ITS Denmark on ITS deployment best practices. The Copenhagen pilot site is important to the project as the city will deploy cooperative systems on at least ninety buses and at twenty-one traffic signals. The route chosen for the pilot site is a central bus route running between Copenhagen Central Station and the
April 26, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Following its successful first meeting in Spain earlier this year, the 7288 Compass4D consortium met for the second time in Copenhagen to plan forthcoming work and to participate in a joint workshop with 5503 ITS Denmark on ITS deployment best practices.

The Copenhagen pilot site is important to the project as the city will deploy cooperative systems on at least ninety buses and at twenty-one traffic signals. The route chosen for the pilot site is a central bus route running between Copenhagen Central Station and the important East Gate Station hub for regional, commuter and S-trains and, from 2018, the underground. It is estimated that over 77,000 passengers use the bus routes between the Central and East Gate stations every day.

”This effort to upgrade our transport systems goes together well with our plan for green mobility and our ambition to be a carbon neutral city in 2025,” said Ayfer Baykal, Mayor of the Technical and Environmental Administration in Copenhagen. “This ITS project can really contribute to cleaner air and better functioning cities.”

Around 200 bus drivers will be using the ITS services. “Here in Copenhagen we have some unique challenges regarding traffic, because bikes take up a lot of space. It is going to be very exciting to see how ITS solutions like Compass4D can create better conditions for buses and help us improve traffic flow and safety throughout the city” Ms Baykal continued.  

The consortium also participated in a workshop, where ITS Denmark representatives and the city council highlighted current national initiatives and demonstrated future plans for the deployment of ITS services. “In the next couple of years using ITS, we will create better traffic flows and traffic safety. The benefits will be better comfort and regularity of the buses and for the city environment. We are really looking forward to continue working with the other cities and to sharing our experiences” Steffen Rasmussen, head of traffic design, City of Copenhagen, said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bus safe turn alert system warns distracted pedestrians
    March 19, 2015
    A new pilot program recently launched by South-eastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) will audibly warn pedestrians in the vicinity of a bus when the vehicle is making a turn. The Safe Turn Alert System pilot is an extension of the Authority's distracted commuter awareness program and designed to warn pedestrians, specifically those engrossed in phone calls, text messages and music that the bus is turning. Protran's Safe Turn Alert Systems have been installed in 12 SEPTA buses for the pilot p
  • Balfour Beatty consortium preferred bidder for Aberdeen road project
    June 13, 2014
    The Connect Roads consortium, comprising Balfour Beatty, Carillion and Galliford Try, has been selected as preferred bidder for the design, build, finance and operate (DBFO) contract to deliver the Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route/Balmedie-Tipperty project for Transport Scotland in partnership with Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Councils. Balfour Beatty will invest up to US$34 million, which represents a one third share of the sponsor’s investment requirement, with Carillion and Galliford Try also inv
  • Developing ‘next generation’ traffic control centre technology
    July 4, 2012
    The Rijkswaterstaat and Highways Agency have joined forces to investigate what the market can do to realise an idealistic vision for traffic control centre technology. Jon Masters reports One particular seminar session of the Intertraffic show in Amsterdam in March was notably over subscribed. So heavy was the press to attend that your author, making his way over late from another appointment, could not get in and found himself craning over other heads locked outside to overhear what was being said. The
  • IBM Big Data helps Dublin improve transport operations
    May 17, 2013
    The city of Dublin is using IBM Big Data identify and solve the root causes of traffic congestion in its public transport network throughout the city, which means improved traffic flow and better mobility for commuters. Integrating data from a citywide network of sensors with geospatial data means that city officials are able to better monitor and manage traffic in real time. To keep the city moving, the council’s traffic control centre works together with local transport operators to manage an extensive ne