Skip to main content

Virtual reality laboratory opens

UK-based technology innovation centre, Transport Systems Catapult (TSC), has announced the opening of a ‘visualisation laboratory’ at its headquarters in Milton Keynes. The laboratory will allow designers and engineers to use cutting edge virtual reality technology to improve the UK’s transport network. The laboratory includes the UK’s first commercially available omni-directional treadmill built by Swedish company Omnifinity and features virtual reality built by local firm Virtual Viewing. The omni-d
August 12, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
UK-based technology innovation centre, 7800 Transport Systems Catapult (TSC), has announced the opening of a ‘visualisation laboratory’ at its headquarters in Milton Keynes. The laboratory will allow designers and engineers to use cutting edge virtual reality technology to improve the UK’s transport network.

The laboratory includes the UK’s first commercially available omni-directional treadmill built by Swedish company Omnifinity and features virtual reality built by local firm Virtual Viewing.  The omni-directional floor enables users of virtual reality to physically walk through virtual worlds adding to the user’s sense of immersion. Using this technology, engineers and designers will be able to test the impact of new transport services and technological innovations without the risks and costs of physical implementation.

Immediate applications include exploring how pedestrians might react when approached by driverless cars on shared walkways. The technology will also allow architects and civil engineers to virtually experience new designs of buildings and public spaces.  The TSC is working to bring pedestrians into these virtual worlds to add to their realism as well as help with Way Finding design and sign off.  This will enable designers to experience their designs with crowds of people moving around and interacting within them, before committing to physical development.  

Graham Fletcher, Modelling and Visualisation director at TSC explained: “We see huge potential for virtual reality technology to help solve the UK’s transport problems at a lower cost and without the associated risks of testing new technology in a live environment. The Omnideck Treadmill and virtual reality equipment we have installed here at the TSC is totally unique in the UK and will allow businesses to experiment, develop and demonstrate new technologies in a new and inspirational way.”

Related Content

  • November 13, 2024
    ITS Australia Awards 2025 finalists announced

    ITS Australia has announced 32 finalists for the 15th Annual ITS Australia Awards, with winners announced at a ceremony on 13 February 2025 in Perth, Western Australia.

  • March 19, 2015
    Car parking and parked cars need not be a technological black hole
    David Crawford mines the potential of joined-up parking. Drivers conventionally see parking as an isolated, often frustrating, action; but collectively their attempts to find a space impact hugely on traffic flows. But new analyses of parking events look set to deliver real benefits to motorists and cities alike. Initiatives getting under way around the world are highlighting the advantages of connecting up parking events and – eventually - parked cars. The hoped-for results include not only enhanced urban
  • November 28, 2016
    UK must prepare for increased transport cyber-security threat, says TSC
    The UK Transport sector needs to increase its focus on cyber-security in the face of rapidly emerging technological developments, according to Transport Systems Catapult (TSC). In a new report, supported by IBM, the Institute of Engineering Technology (IET), the Intelligent Mobility Partnership (IMPART) and the Digital Catapult, the TSC cites numerous trends in the realms of technology, cyber security, mobility, and society are all converging to make it a much more complex environment in which to deliver
  • February 3, 2021
    Cohda: CPM helps AVs see through blind spots 
    Collective perceptive messaging allowed RSU to share information by using V2X tech