Skip to main content

Varanasi mobility data solution finalists announced

Toyota Mobility Foundation cities challenge also includes Detroit & Venice
By Adam Hill January 30, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Traffic in Varanasi (© Creatoroflove | Dreamstime.com)

The Toyota Mobility Foundation has announced the 10 companies - receiving $50,000 each - which will take part in the Sustainable Cities Challenge in Varanasi, India.

The challenge involves two other cities, Detroit, US, and Venice, Italy, whose finalists have already been revealed.

Varanasi is a holy site which attracts many pilgrims from around the world as well as from India itself. In 2022, Varanasi's annual floating population was estimated to be 35 times the local population. 

The challenge is to create "innovative, data-driven solutions" that make crowded areas of Varanasi's old city of Kashi safer and more accessible for religious tourists, local residents and vulnerable groups, such as elderly people and those with disabilities.

Better management of overcrowding at events - including negotiating private vehicles in the streets - and interventions that allow people to make better decisions for themselves are among the desired outcomes of the challenge.

Each company will receive a $50,000 implementation grant; for the five teams that may make it to the final, grants of $130,000 are available.

Arcadis is among the 10 chosen companies, and will test its Sankalp solution for crowd management, combining spatial analytics, which includes real-time monitoring "and actionable intelligence for safer and efficient movement of crowd". 

Meanwhile Vogic's solution uses video analytics, vision language GenAI models, dynamic signage, public announcements, and multilingual WhatsApp communication to better manage crowds.

And Tiami Networks' PolyEdge leverages 5G and WiFi to provide real-time detection, tracking and analytics. The firm can monitor and manage large-scale pedestrian and vehicular movements in real time. Using AI-driven analytics and adaptive signal processing, it can track crowd densities, identify bottlenecks, and provide insights to optimize flow and enhance safety, Tiami says.

Click here for a full list of the semi-finalists: there is $1.5 million final implementation funding, to be shared among up to three winners.

The importance of this sort of crowd management has been thrown into sharp relief by the deaths of at least 30 people in a crush in the city of Prayagraj, northern India, this week. They were attending the world's largest religious gathering, the Hindu festival Kumbh Mela, which takes place every 12 years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cohda Wireless: 'New York has the best urban canyons'
    July 21, 2020
    Dr Paul Alexander, chief technical officer of Cohda Wireless, talks to Adam Hill about DSRC versus C-V2X, global connected vehicle take-up, the uses of WiFi – and, of course, seeing round the Big Apple's buildings...
  • Watch your step: the sidewalk robots are here
    March 14, 2023
    The way we order and pay for goods has changed radically – but what about how those goods are delivered? Gordon Feller looks at how sidewalk robots might reshape the urban landscape
  • US transportation secretary Foxx announces US$100 million in grants
    September 26, 2014
    US transportation secretary Anthony Foxx has announced US$100 million in competitive grants to 24 recipients in 19 states to significantly improve bus service and bus facilities in urban and rural communities where residents depend heavily on public transportation. The grants are provided through the Federal Transit Administration’s (FTA) Ladders of Opportunity Initiative, which supports the modernisation and expansion of transit bus service across the nation, with the purpose of connecting disadvantaged an
  • Traffic to flow freely over world’s widest bridge
    November 13, 2012
    Pete Goldin reports on a new Egis project in Canada, providing open road tolling operations for the widest bridge in the world. A bridge can present a bottleneck in a system of roads or it can support the smooth and unobstructed flow of traffic. Much depends on the bridge design, surrounding infrastructure and tolling system. By adding lanes and deploying open road tolling (ORT), the new Port Mann Bridge located in the metropolitan Vancouver area in British Columbia, will alleviate congestion at one of the