Skip to main content

Go-Ahead partners with CitySwift platform

Platform is designed to maximise network reliability and punctuality
By David Arminas October 30, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Go-Ahead Ireland and CitySwift leadership teams

The Go-Ahead Group has partnered with CitySwift, a public transport performance platform used to make timetables more efficient and maximise service reliability in England.

The platform will provide Go-Ahead’s operating companies with the insights needed to maximise network reliability and punctuality. Go-Ahead has successfully used CitySwift in its East Yorkshire Buses, Oxford Bus Company, and Go North East operations. Go-Ahead said that these projects showed an improved service punctuality of up to 14%, a 4% increase in customer journeys and increased scheduler productivity.

CitySwift will be rolled out on a phased basis starting with Go North West and Kent Fastrack by the end of this year and for all other regional bus operating companies by 1 January next year. However, Go-Ahead said its London service is expected to be running by February followed by Go-Ahead Ireland later in 2025.

Powered by intelligent data processing, CitySwift optimises more than one billion passenger trips yearly. CitySwift’s platform removes obstacles to accessing transportation data, empowering teams with rapid and reliable performance insights.

Matt Carney, chief executive at Go-Ahead Bus, said the company is committed to continuously improving service reliability and punctuality for the tens of millions of customers who use our services across the country: “Using the CitySwift AI-powered platform to optimise our schedules and timetables will help us achieve this.”

Alan Farrelly, co-founder of CitySwift in 2016, said the partnership with Go-Ahead Group marks “a milestone” for building smart cities of the future. “We have worked with Go-Ahead Group since 2020, seeing tangible results across the companies which implemented our technology in achieving more efficient, faster and reliable bus services.” 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • "AI can help fast-track Net Zero and Vision Zero," says VivaCity
    January 16, 2024
    Artificial intelligence isn't just about self-driving cars - and ‘smart’ doesn't always have to be shiny, new and innovative. Mark Nicholson, CEO at VivaCity, offers a few predictions for 2024...
  • Counting the environmental costs of ITS deployment
    October 29, 2015
    David Crawford looks at the latest thinking about calculating the benefits associated with the environmental side of ITS schemes. The penny is dropping that some environmental costs “are being shifted outside the traditional bounds of evaluation methods” for ITS-based road transport projects, according to researchers at the UK University of Leeds’ Institute for Transport Studies.
  • Six easy steps to security
    October 22, 2018
    As security threats become increasingly vast and varied, multinationals are beginning to see the need for an effective global security operations centre to protect their organisation. James I. Chong spells out what is required. You know you need a global security operations centre (GSOC) to support what you’ve built, identify threats, and prevent disasters before they happen - but how do you know if it’s truly effective? There’s no shortage of information coming into operation centres. Too often, it’s the
  • Artificial intelligence changes Idemia’s image
    May 13, 2021
    Idemia pledges to make life safer for VRUs with new products based around existing technology, Jean-Paul Baldacci tells Adam Hill