Skip to main content

Traveller app spells big opportunities for authorities

The spread of a new generation of travel apps such as Citymapper will open up unprecedented opportunities for transport authorities and city planners as much as they help individual travellers minimise their travel times. These apps for mobile phones (and increasingly in-vehicle satellite navigation systems) show users the quickest route to their destination. They take into account real-time traffic congestion on potential routes, delays or otherwise on the trains, metro and mass transit systems and wheth
February 25, 2016 Read time: 3 mins

The spread of a new generation of travel apps such as Citymapper will open up unprecedented opportunities for transport authorities and city planners as much as they help individual travellers minimise their travel times.

These apps for mobile phones (and increasingly in-vehicle satellite navigation systems) show users the quickest route to their destination. They take into account real-time traffic congestion on potential routes, delays or otherwise on the trains, metro and mass transit systems and whether it is faster to walk or cycle. And because they cover all travel modes, if there is a problem in one area - be that on the roads or in a metro network - travellers using these apps will automatically be directed towards an alternative route or travel mode.

However, the opposite is also true. When congestion is alleviated in one area (a new road is built or a metro line is upgraded), these apps will detect the shorter travel time and direct more travellers to use the new route or service. This will continue until the new route or service becomes as popular as the existing alternatives and an equilibrium is created across all modes and route options.

In performing this modal balancing act, the apps provide authorities and transport planners with the freedom they need to design, plan and implement the transport systems needed to cope with increasing volumes of travellers and freight. Instead of effectively limiting themselves to overcoming current problems on individual routes and individual modes, authorities and transport planners will now have much greater licence to think about ‘the big picture’. This may be aided by high-level data from those apps regarding modal splits and comparative travel times.

Armed with this information, planners can devise the multimodal transport systems required for tomorrow’s travellers, while knowing that the new apps will route people away from the disruption during the construction phase and towards the service or facility once it is completed.

National, local and city authorities must take advantage of this opportunity to plan and implement tomorrow’s transport systems. That said, care must be taken because with these apps the ‘predict and provide’ model will be self-fulfilling – or self-fulfilling even faster than it was in the past.

It remains, however, an opportunity authorities must not miss.

Related Content

  • No city is a traffic island
    April 2, 2024
    Beate Kubitz reflects on the rising tide of suburban drivers - and how cities across Europe are dealing with them as worries over air quality multiply
  • Glasgow finalises its mobility-shift strategy
    February 14, 2024
    Scottish city wants 'far more sustainable and equitable modes' than the private car
  • Sound synthesis makes hybrid and electric vehicles safer
    January 20, 2012
    The growing popularity of hybrids and electric vehicles gives rise to new safety issues in urban environments, as many of the aural cues associated with engine noise can be missing. The solution is to intelligently make vehicles noisier. The rise in popularity of hybrids and Electric Vehicles (EVs) is a result of environmental pressures, shifts in taxation and emerging technologies for batteries and motors. Competition among the car manufacturers means these vehicles need to be cost effective to buy and ope
  • In-vehicle systems as enforcement enablers?
    January 30, 2012
    From an enforcement perspective at least, Toyota's recent recalls over problems with accelerator pedal assemblies had a positive outcome in that for the first time a major motor manufacturer outside of the US acknowledged publicly what many have known or suspected for quite a while: that the capability exists within certain car companies to extract data from a vehicle onboard unit which can be used to help ascertain, if not prove outright, just what was happening in the vital seconds up to an accident or cr