Skip to main content

Traveller experience study identifies key themes for improving transport network

The UK’s Transport Systems Catapult has identified key areas of development in the transport network in its traveller experience study, Traveller Needs, which comprised of 10,000 online questionnaire respondents, 50 company interviews, and 100 expert interviews. The research found that 75 per cent of journeys are characterised by pain-points, with 57 per cent of travellers always looking for ways to optimise their journey. Public transport is considered to be poor value for money with the ‘high cost
October 14, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
The UK’s 7800 Transport Systems Catapult has identified key areas of development in the transport network in its traveller experience study, Traveller Needs, which comprised of 10,000 online questionnaire respondents, 50 company interviews, and 100 expert interviews.

The research found that 75 per cent of journeys are characterised by pain-points, with 57 per cent of travellers always looking for ways to optimise their journey.

Public transport is considered to be poor value for money with the ‘high cost of the journey’ being the most cited pain-point. For private cars, the start-and-stop nature of driving, along with parking, are the most cited pain-points.

Multi-modal journeys are especially painful for UK travellers and each interchange increases the number of pain-points experienced. The study found that 31 per cent of journeys made today in the UK would not have been made if alternative means were available that didn’t necessitate physical travel, i.e. virtual mobility.

The study indicates that the answer to the issues lies in the emerging intelligent mobility industry – utilising emerging technology such as autonomous vehicles, with 39 per cent of those surveyed indicating they would consider driverless cars today, as well as exploiting mobile data to enable user-focused, integrated, efficient and sustainable transport systems. Such a solution would break down the barriers between distinct transport services to offer smart, seamless, end to end journeys.

Transport Systems Catapult CEO Steve Yianni commented: “The Traveller Needs and UK Capability Study offers a clear pathway to providing the improvements travellers desire in their journeys. We’ve identified four transformational themes in the study – access, automation, demand and supply and integration – which offer roadmaps towards smarter intelligent mobility service for travellers. On their own, the long-term visions for each of the four areas we have identified would revolutionise how we move people and goods around the world, but they will exhibit even greater step change when they are combined.

“There is also a clear economic argument for doing this. The study has identified 10 value spaces for intelligent mobility with an estimated US$86 billion of revenue opportunities in the UK alone and previous research has suggested that this global market will be worth around US$1.3 trillion annually by 2025. If we focus on increasing capability in areas such as data privacy, connectivity and traveller behaviour we can have the opportunity to create a world-leading intelligent mobility industry, bringing jobs and economic growth to the UK.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Traffic monitoring and hard shoulder running
    March 1, 2013
    Hard shoulder running is on the increase – and the detection and monitoring of incidents on affected roads is occupying the minds of experts across Europe and the US
  • Virtual traffic management centres, a new direction in traffic monitoring
    January 30, 2012
    David Crawford picks up a new direction trend in traffic monitoring The surprise winner in the Traffic Management Centre (TMC) category of the recently-announced 2011 OSMOSE (Open Source for MObile and SustainablE city) Awards for European innovations in urban transport, is the Danish city of Aalborg - which doesn't have a TMC. Alternatively, one might consider its 'virtual' TMC as a signpost for the future in medium-sized cities.
  • Transport integration separates rural idyll from remote isolation
    June 13, 2017
    David Crawford investigates the operation of Total Transport in some of Europe’s more rural areas. Total Transport is a concept that is gaining traction in Europe as a means of making it easier for people without access to a car and living in rural and remote communities, to travel to work, the shops, schools and hospitals. It involves maximising vehicle availability and integrating scheduled services with other transport services (including taxis) commissioned or contracted by more than one local governmen
  • Ford Mobility: analytics aids transport proactivity
    April 2, 2020
    Ford Mobility has demonstrated how data analytics can help implement London's transport strategy in areas such as traffic re-timing and in eliminating all road fatalities (Vision Zero) by 2041.