Skip to main content

PTV opens up urban Access

New SaaS product is powered by Model2Go and gives insight into city mobility
By Adam Hill December 8, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
PTV Access: dashboard helps visualise accessibility of cities

PTV Group has launched PTV Access, a new interactive Software as a Service (SaaS) dashboard to visualise the accessibility and mobility potential of cities.  

It is designed to give insight into the quality of transport infrastructure, and data about which modes work best for people.

Already available for the 50 largest German cities, PTV says it will be "gradually expanded" to include cities worldwide.

It is the first tool in what the company says will be "a new product line of data-driven, lightweight, SaaS tools for mobility analysis, management, and operation to be released in the near future as part of the company’s plans to deliver easy, accessible mobility insights to its customer base".

PTV Access is powered by PTV Model2Go, which automates the building of basic transport models.

PTV has created an accessibility score for the cities currently on PTV Access: this covers how well people can reach a set of common points of interest (POIs) such as schools, hospitals and shopping areas by different modes of transport.

An additional ranking shows which cities perform best in terms of walkability, biking, public transit, and driving: Munich is at the top of the ranking for all modes of transport, with Berlin and Frankfurt in the second and third spot depending on the mode.

Users can look at the modal accessibility of different areas of the city and compare cities on the interactive map.

Other features, such as road network density and the proximity to public transport stops, are also available.

“Access to mobility, means access to society – to education, to jobs, to leisure," says Christian Haas, CEO of PTV Group. "Thus, improving accessibility also means empowering people to move forward.”

“Tools for data visualisation like PTV Access are incredibly valuable here. They empower city stakeholders to shape sustainable and inclusive urban environments focused on the citizen’s needs.”

Future additions to the dashboard are under consideration, including traffic flow, safety analysis, data customisation and embedding of results via an API.  

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cost Benefit: the economic case for cycling
    August 20, 2019
    Cycling is good for us for any number of reasons. David Crawford finds that it is now possible to access basic, low-cost data which will help make the economic case for improving infrastructure Cycling is enjoying a favourable press the world over as a ‘good thing’ in the economic, environmental and social spheres. A recent study on the Value of Cycling from the UK’s University of Birmingham, for example, shows that cycle-friendly urban settings can deliver annualised transport infrastructural support co
  • MaaS by any other name
    February 6, 2020
    Has the roll-out of Mobility as a Service stalled - or could it just be that multimodal travel is simply happening under a variety of different names?
  • Iteris supports V2X data exchange in Florida 
    January 14, 2022
    Data exchange will enable FDoT to communicate critical travel information to the travelling public
  • GM pledges 40,000 EV chargers in US & Canada
    November 10, 2021
    Meanwhile Connected Kerb says it will deploy £1.9bn worth of chargers across UK by 2030