Skip to main content

European CO-GISTICS project launches reference architecture

Approaching the end of its first year of activities, the European CO-GISTICS (Co-Logistics) project has revealed the reference architecture that will be used for all pilot sites and services. The architecture details the standards and policies to be used to ensure interoperability and the ability to replicate the services at a wider European level. CO-GISTICS is the first European project fully dedicated to the deployment of cooperative intelligent transport systems (C-ITS) applied to logistics. CO-GI
October 22, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Approaching the end of its first year of activities, the European CO-GISTICS (Co-Logistics) project has revealed the reference architecture that will be used for all pilot sites and services. The architecture details the standards and policies to be used to ensure interoperability and the ability to replicate the services at a wider European level.

CO-GISTICS is the first European project fully dedicated to the deployment of cooperative intelligent transport systems (C-ITS) applied to logistics.

CO-GISTICS services will be deployed in seven logistics hubs, Arad (Romania), Bordeaux (France), Bilbao (Spain), Frankfurt (Germany), Thessaloniki (Greece), Trieste (Italy) and Vigo (Spain).

With 33 partners including public authorities, fleet operators, trucks, freight forwarders, terminal operators and logistics providers, the CO-GISTICS consortium will install the services on at least 325 trucks and vans and runs until January 2016.

A detailed technical architecture has also been produced for each pilot site taking into account core and local services.

The CO-GISTICS pilot site in Bordeaux will implement the different services in three ways: locally around the city of Bordeaux and in the Grand Port Maritime of Bordeaux; on a long-distance scale along a corridor; and internationally with a link to the Bilbao pilot site in Spain.

The main characteristics of the architecture are vertical and uniform support for connectivity from cooperative systems to logistics applications levels and interaction with freight objects and services through M2M interfaces and real-time communication capabilities.

“In this context, the CO-GISTICS reference architecture should merge different systems and solutions coming from the ITS environment (already tested and validated in most of the sites selected in the project), together with new core services as the traffic and itinerary services, the CO2 monitoring service as well as cloud service to facilitate real time communication and freight object virtualisation to support the five cooperative logistics services,” said German Herrero, head of Transport & Trade Logistics Sector at ATOS and responsible for the implementation of the reference architecture.

Related Content

  • Open communication platform to support cooperative infrastructure
    July 23, 2012
    Within the European Commission's CVIS project, work is going on to shrink the open vehicle communication platform to make it more market-ready and to remove barriers to the creation of appropriate applications by those external to the project. Here, ERTICO's Zeljko Jeftic and Paul Kompfner and Q-Free's Knut Evensen discuss progress. Development of the open communication platform which will support the various applications developed by the European Commission's (EC's) Cooperative Vehicle-Infrastructure Syste
  • USDOT launches Co-Pilot cost estimation tool
    December 18, 2014
    The U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) has launched its Co-Pilot Cost Overview for Planning Ideas and Logical Organisation Tool. Co-Pilot is a high-level cost estimation planning tool designed to facilitate the development of cost estimates for the connected vehicle pilot deployments. Featuring an intuitive and user-friendly interface, co-pilot allows users to generate deployment cost estimates for 56 applications drawn from the following program areas: Vehicle-to-vehicle safety; Vehicle-to-infra
  • CityMobil2 selects first seven sites
    May 7, 2014
    The European project CityMobil2 has selected the first round of sites to run demonstrations and showcases of automated road transport systems, which are made up of vehicles operating without a driver in collective mode, under the control of a fleet and infrastructure supervision system.
  • Necessity is the mother of invention
    April 6, 2016
    The Netherlands aims to lead Europe, and the world, in the area of cooperative ITS and smart mobility. That’s not an aspiration – it’s a necessity as Frans op de Beek, principal advisor for traffic management and ITS within the Rijkswaterstaat, the Ministry for Infrastructure and the Environment, explains.