Skip to main content

PTV models City of York’s traffic

PTV to help optimise real-time traffic management in UK tourism hotspot
By David Arminas May 13, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The real-time model will use live and historical traffic data - although not as historical as York Minster (© Natthapon Ngamnithiporn | Dreamstime.com)

PTV Group software for predictive traffic modelling will be deployed in the northern UK city of York to create a real-time city-wide transport model.

Consultancy firm Wood has been appointed as lead partner in implementing the project, which is supported by the UK government’s National Productivity Investment Fund. 

The project is the first transport modelling and connected vehicle project of its kind in the UK, according to Wood and city authorities.

A live model of York’s traffic network will be set up as a digital representation fed from a wide range of real-time data sources. 

In addition to traffic optimisation through the live model, a strategic model will provide information as the basis for long-term decision making concerning the local transport plan, development planning and business case applications.

Wood will work in partnership with independent transport modelling consultant Relative Gap, and PTV, which has its headquarters in Karlsruhe, Germany.

The real-time model will also provide predictions of traffic responses to planned and unplanned events using live and historical traffic data, ensuring the best possible strategy can be implemented quickly and efficiently, explained Devrim Kara, UK director at PTV.

“This state-of-the-art programme will help the City of York provide a transport plan which enhances its citizens’ lives and helps protect the urban environment,” said Joe Sczurko, chief executive of Wood’s technical consulting solutions business.

The work is part of the city’s Smarter Travel Evolution Programme (Step) which was awarded £2.8m funding in March 2018 through the UK Department for Transport’s National Productivity Investment Fund.

According to York’s authorities, Step stands out from other funded projects because it makes that best use of existing highway infrastructure with predominantly technology-, data- and modelling-based improvements. 

The majority of other schemes under the National Productivity Investment Fund are ‘traditional’ transport infrastructure schemes which might include road widening and junction improvements. 
 

UTC

Related Content

  • March 28, 2022
    Lidar: recipes for success
    Lidar is being deployed all over the world - and you can even read a cookbook on the subject...
  • December 22, 2015
    Jeddah juggles transport needs of residents, pilgrims and tourists
    Mass pilgrimages, new tourists and a growing population lead Jeddah to seek some smart transport solutions as David Crawford finds out. Rationalising traffic movement and public transport in a major Middle Eastern business and tourist centre that is also a gateway for millions of religious pilgrims every year is the challenge for the 20-year Jeddah Strategic Plan and the Jeddah Public Transport Programme (JPTP) it spawned. The latter is costed at US$8bn.
  • August 25, 2022
    PTV Group to highlight next-gen traffic management
    In a rapidly changing mobility world, cities are looking for daring ideas and smart solutions to revolutionise the way people move. 
  • January 24, 2019
    PTV works with partners to develop transport modelling software for AVs
    PTV, a member of the CoEXist European research project, has announced the development of transport modelling software which it says is ready for automated vehicles (AVs). CoEXist is a three-year project which focuses on the interaction between semi-automated and conventional vehicles in the transition to fully-AV fleets. It is funded under the Horizon 2020 framework programme of the European Commission with a budget of €3.5 million. Four cities are involved: Gothenburg (Sweden), Stuttgart (Germany),