Skip to main content

TRL launches 2013 traffic signals tour

Following its successful launch last year, the Transport Research Laboratory (TRL) Traffic Signals Tour 2013 tour will take place at six key locations across the UK during 1 to 16 October, calling at London, Cardiff, Leicester, Leeds and Glasgow as well as at TRL Crowthorne headquarters in Berkshire.
August 7, 2013 Read time: 1 min

The 2012 event provided access to some of TRL’s latest research and the latest product developments and releases.  2013 is planned to be even better, with new research projects and invited industry experts to present their work, thoughts and news. TRL will also be reporting on some of its latest work, including a new project that aims to integrate traffic control and air quality.

Registration will open in late August.  Contact TRL for more information.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Virtual ITS European Congress 2020: report
    November 25, 2020
    ITS industry ‘needs to make a move towards each other’, Congress delegates hear
  • Melbourne's 'intelligent corridor' opens
    March 24, 2022
    Kapsch TrafficCom's EcoTrafiX platform will be used on 2.5km section of Nicholson Street
  • TRL: Cities must do more to help VRUs
    May 9, 2019
    UK cities must learn from the Netherlands and Denmark if active travel and increased safety for vulnerable road users are to co-exist, says TRL’s Marcus Jones Active travel’ refers to modes of transport in which physical effort is required to undertake purposeful journeys - for example, walking or cycling to school, work or the local shops, as well as walking and standing as part of accessing public transport. The benefits of replacing short car journeys with more active forms of transport are obvious. Act
  • Fara keeps data delivery simple
    January 25, 2018
    Simplifying the delivery of data and information gathered by traffic management, ticketing and other systems can improve travel efficiency and the traveller’s experience. Having quantified and analysed the previously unmonitored movement of road vehicles, trains, metros, cyclists and pedestrians, the ITS sector is a prime example of the digital world. Patterns discerned from those previously random happenings enable authorities to design more efficient transport systems, allow transport operators to run