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Data in the driving seat for city transport systems

We are drown­ing in data, accord­ing to Nell Wat­son, a lead­ing futur­ist and mem­ber of Cal­i­for­nia-based Sin­gu­lar­i­ty University’s arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence and robot­ics fac­ul­ty. “That is a very good thing,” she says, emphat­i­cal­ly, “because it gives us so much capa­bil­i­ty to train machines.” Ms Wat­son posits that in the 10,000 years to 2000, human­i­ty amassed five exabytes of data, a colos­sal amount, but which is now dou­bled less than every 60 sec­onds.

By 2025 the aver­age con­nect­ed per­son, any­where in the world, will inter­act with con­nect­ed devices near­ly 4,800 times a day, or once every 18 sec­onds, ana­lyst firm IDC pre­dicts in its recent Data Age 2025 white paper. “The poten­tial ben­e­fits of this vast quan­ti­ty of data for city dwellers is enor­mous – improved air qual­i­ty, reduced traf­fic and safer streets among them,” says Glenn Rogers, senior directer, Europe, Mid­dle East and Africa, at Sea­gate Tech­nol­o­gy, the organ­i­sa­tion that com­mis­sioned the research.

Indeed, the tor­rents of data – the pri­ma­ry dri­ver of machine intel­li­gence – are begin­ning to oil the trans­porta­tion infra­struc­ture of smart cities, where cit­i­zens now expect to flow to and between urban loca­tions, using mul­ti­ple modes of trans­port. In the­o­ry, the data har­vest­ed from an increas­ing num­ber of sen­sors and oth­er dat­a­points, blend­ed with GPS tech­nol­o­gy, can pro­vide real-time map­ping to aid smoother inner-city trav­el.

The opportunities of so much data

Devel­op­ments in data analy­sis may flash the green light for inno­va­tors and entre­pre­neurs, how­ev­er com­plex­i­ties around lega­cy infra­struc­ture and a long list of stake­hold­ers com­pet­ing for fund­ing means the brakes of progress are being applied. In prac­tice, then, the major­i­ty of cities are play­ing catch-up and fail­ing to max­imise the poten­cy of emerg­ing, data-hun­gry tech­nolo­gies.

Data har­vest­ed from an increas­ing num­ber of sen­sors and oth­er dat­a­points, blend­ed with GPS tech­nol­o­gy, can pro­vide real-time map­ping to aid smoother inner-city trav­el

“There is a huge oppor­tu­ni­ty in this area,” enthus­es Miran­da Sharp, head of Ord­nance Survey’s inno­va­tion and out­reach depart­ment. “The amount of data avail­able is explod­ing; data from mobile phones, smart tick­ets, CCTV cam­eras, engine-per­for­mance sys­tems and from social media can be used by con­trol sys­tems in traf­fic lights, emer­gency ser­vices, and for mak­ing long-term deci­sions about routes and demand.”

 TfL setting example for data sharing 

As Lon­don­ers will attest, a seam­less trav­el expe­ri­ence in the cap­i­tal is some dis­tance away, with over­ground and under­ground train delays, and stand­ing traf­fic a near-dai­ly frus­tra­tion. Although it has rapid­ly improved in the last hand­ful of years ever since the pio­neer­ing deci­sion by Trans­port for Lon­don (TfL) to open, and make pub­lic, its data.

Now, accord­ing to Deloitte, some 42 per cent of London’s com­muters use at least one of the 600-plus data-pow­ered appli­ca­tions spawned from TfL’s data. These include the pop­u­lar Citymap­per and Waze, plus oth­er jour­ney plan­ners, map­ping, book­ing and sched­ul­ing tools, and ana­lyt­ics engines.

Deloitte’s study, pub­lished ear­li­er this year, found that there are more than 80 TfL data feeds being used by over 13,000 reg­is­tered devel­op­ers, rang­ing from indi­vid­u­als to multi­na­tion­al tech organ­i­sa­tions. Fur­ther­more, the total val­ue of open data to the organ­i­sa­tion, cus­tomers and oth­ers is esti­mat­ed to be £130 mil­lion a year.

At present more than 31 mil­lion jour­neys are made in Lon­don every day, and each one serves to improve the wider trans­port net­work, with data-fuelled arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence learn­ing to spot pat­terns and pre­dict trends. TfL recent­ly analysed data from the free wifi pro­vid­ed in 97 per cent of its tube sta­tions and in only four weeks had man­aged to recon­struct 42 mil­lion jour­neys through the net­work from five mil­lion dis­tinct devices.

Ms Sharp holds up TfL as a “great exam­ple of how the data from an inte­grat­ed trans­port sys­tem being made avail­able gives rise to a num­ber of con­sumer ser­vices that opti­mis­es routes and use of the net­work”. New ways of util­is­ing data are being explored.

How data is powering smart city transport schemes globally

She con­tin­ues: “Moovit, an Israeli com­pa­ny avail­able in more than 2,500 cities across 82 coun­tries around the world, takes a dif­fer­ent approach, using data from mobile phones to cre­ate data feeds about trans­port to assist both con­sumers and the mix of pub­lic and pri­vate author­i­ties that man­age the trans­port to opti­mise the expe­ri­ence. And in Man­ches­ter and Dublin we are see­ing the first exam­ples of cycling infra­struc­ture being built on the back of data pro­duced by cyclists.”

Else­where, count­less oth­er data-dri­ven smart city trans­port schemes are tak­ing flight. They have, for instance, already uproot­ed Copenhagen’s pub­lic trans­port sys­tem – 40 per cent of com­muters use bikes – and dou­bled the aver­age speed of Singapore’s inner-city traf­fic. And in Hel­mond, a south­ern city in the Nether­lands, Swe­co UK’s cloud-based Smart Traf­fic sys­tem, which col­lects data from exist­ing loop sen­sors and over­lays it with GPS loca­tion data, is aim­ing to cut con­ges­tion. Sim­u­la­tions show the poten­tial for 40 per cent reduc­tions.

“In the future this will allow city author­i­ties to give greater pri­or­i­ty to pub­lic trans­port by intro­duc­ing new ini­tia­tives such as ‘green-light phas­es’ at inter­sec­tions dur­ing busy, rush-hour peri­ods,” says Stephen Rus­sell, Swe­co UK’s direc­tor for trans­porta­tion. “This tech­nol­o­gy will also form a key part of the infra­struc­ture required to pre­pare for the advent of dri­ver­less cars. In a future where traf­fic sig­nals are no longer need­ed, vehi­cles will use a cloud-based cen­tral traf­fic man­age­ment sys­tem they can talk to that will pro­vide every car, bus and tram with per­mis­sion to cross a junc­tion.”

Transport networks must collaborate to serve community of the future

Dr Nick Reed, head of mobil­i­ty research and devel­op­ment at elec­tron­ics giant Bosch, agrees. “Vehi­cle data is already inform­ing mobil­i­ty solu­tions of the future, as auto­mat­ed dri­ving func­tions rely heav­i­ly on data col­lect­ed through vehi­cle sen­sors for deci­sion-mak­ing,” he says. His organ­i­sa­tion has devel­oped a com­mu­ni­ty-based park­ing ser­vice that utilis­es data-shar­ing to guide dri­vers to avail­able, out-of-sight spaces, sav­ing around £500 in wast­ed time a year, while simul­ta­ne­ous­ly reduc­ing emis­sions and stress lev­els.

Jacqui Tay­lor, chief exec­u­tive and co-founder of Fly­ing­Bi­na­ry, and a strate­gic advis­er to the UK gov­ern­ment on smart cities, warns: “By 2050, the glob­al pop­u­la­tion is fore­cast to exceed nine bil­lion, 80 per cent of which will inhab­it cities.” While trans­port sys­tems will be at the beat­ing heart of tomorrow’s urban cen­tres, she stress­es that mul­ti-stake­hold­er col­lab­o­ra­tion is imper­a­tive.

“Trans­porta­tion net­works in smart cities oper­ate a mul­ti-agency mod­el that requires data and infor­ma­tion tech­nol­o­gy ser­vices to be shared across many organ­i­sa­tions,” Dr Tay­lor con­cludes. “These ser­vices form a part of the city-crit­i­cal infra­struc­ture that must sup­port the expect­ed sig­nif­i­cant increas­es in pop­u­la­tion. Hence the need now to use shared, not just open, data prin­ci­ples for trans­port infra­struc­ture.”