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Navigating the future: How autonomous vehicles will benefit business, mobility, and the environment Just the ticket: Can a new rail franchising programme transform the passenger experience? Cleared for landing: The real-time data initiative that is slashing delay times at British airports IMPACT EXPLORING INTELLIGENT MOBILITY REVIEW 2014-2015
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IMPACT airports - Transport Systems · Transport Systems Catapult is positioning the UK at the forefront of the next revolution in how we move people and goods around ... of transport

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Page 1: IMPACT airports - Transport Systems · Transport Systems Catapult is positioning the UK at the forefront of the next revolution in how we move people and goods around ... of transport

Navigating the future: How autonomous vehicles will benefit business, mobility, and the environment

Just the ticket: Can a new rail franchising programme transform the passenger experience?

Cleared for landing: The real-time data initiative that is slashing delay times at British airportsIMPACT

E X PLORING INTELLIGENT MOBILIT Y

RE V IE W 2014-2015

Page 2: IMPACT airports - Transport Systems · Transport Systems Catapult is positioning the UK at the forefront of the next revolution in how we move people and goods around ... of transport

ForewordIntelligent Mobility: the smarter, greener, and more efficient movement of people and goods around the world

B ritain has a long history of transport innovation: from the shipbuilders who paved the way for globalisation, to

the railways that underpinned the industrial revolution. We pioneered the era of modern aviation, the airline industry, air traffic control, and even the development of radar.

Britain is still a world leader in transport innovation, and the Transport Systems Catapult is positioning the UK at the forefront of the next revolution in how we move people and goods around the world.

From driverless vehicles and improved airport data systems to integrated logistics, sentiment mapping, and smart traffic lights, we are harnessing emerging technology to make transport more efficient and connected.

The global market for the evolving Intelligent Mobility sector is estimated to be worth £900bn a year by 2025. The Transport Systems Catapult is helping the UK secure as much of that market

OUR VISION IS TO DRIVE UK GLOBAL LEADERSHIP IN INTELLIGENT MOBILITY – PROMOTING SUSTAINED ECONOMIC GROWTH AND WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED, EFFICIENT, AND SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORTCHAIRMAN, TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT WILL WHITEHORN

as possible – supporting business, creating jobs, and driving economic growth.

Only one year since our launch in June 2014, we’re already delivering significant impact for the UK. There is now an extra £360m in the economy thanks to the work of the Catapult. This represents investment in driverless car technology, more innovation in the rail system, and increased efficiency for the UK’s airports.

There has never been more opportunity for businesses and researchers working in areas related to Intelligent Mobility. The Transport Systems Catapult is ensuring that the best ideas in the UK lead to commercial success by driving innovation and stimulating enterprise.

Will Whitehorn, Chairman, Transport Systems Catapult

RightWill Whitehorn: Britain has a long history of transport innovation

FIRST WORD

IMPACT / 03

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CONTENTS

05 06 08AT A GL A NCE

The Transport Systems Catapult's highlights

of the year

IN T RODUC T ION

Why Intelligent Mobility matters. By Catapult Chief

Executive Steve Yianni

DR I V ING CH A NGE

Sit back and relax. Driverless vehicles are

on their way

14 20 22INNOVAT ION ON T R ACK

How tech is transforming end-to-end rail journeys

FROM BR A IN S T O BUSINE S S

Forming the link between universities and enterprise

BLUE-SK Y T HINK ING

Smart control systems are set to maximise UK airspace

28 32 34MODEL L ING T HE

F U T UR E

What does the future hold? Modelling has the answers

CH A MPIONING SM A L L BUSINE S S

A new fund puts SMEs on the map

IN NUMBER S

Key achievements over the past year and projections

for what's ahead

The Transport Systems Catapult outlines its goals as event

focuses on current technology and future trends

BBC films an episode of Click at the Imovation Centre, giving

viewers an opportunity to view the interactive tabletop

simulator and the sentiment mapping projection

The Innovation in Rail Franchising project is

shortlisted for a Civil Service award for its work in supporting

innovation and growth

Two students win the Pods of the Future schools competition, earning them a trophy, work

experience, and the chance to bring some of their visions alive in future

MP Greg Clark visits the Catapult to announce a

£79.3m regional investment as he gets a glimpse of the

future of transport

The LUTZ Pathfinder, a driverless pod that will be the first

autonomous vehicle in the UK to work on public footpaths, is

launched at a government event in Greenwich

Modelling for Intelligent Mobility, a report

commissioned by the Transport Systems Catapult, highlights new opportunities

for modellers

Chancellor George Osborne unveils a

further £100m government investment in the development of

driverless vehicles

The Transport Systems Catapult announces it will

help create the world’s first Intelligent Mobility Investment Fund to pump £50-£100m into fast-growth technology SMEs

SEPTEMBER 2014 OCTOBER 2014 NOVEMBER 2014

DECEMBER 2014 JANUARY 2015 FEBRUARY 2015

FEBRUARY 2015 MARCH 2015 APRIL 2015

£79.3MILLION

INVESTMENT

£100MILLION

INVESTMENT

£50-£100MILLION

SMEs INVESTMENT

LUTZ PATHFINDER LAUNCHED

IN GREENWICHCOMPETITION WIN

CIVIL SERVICE AWARDSPONSORS OF

THE LOW CARBON VEHICLE CONFERENCE

BBC FILMING

NEW OPPORTUNITIES

INSIDE

IMPACT / 0504 / IMPACT

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street smartsTRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT CHIEF EXECUTIVE STEVE YIANNI EXPLAINS WHY INTELLIGENT MOBILITY IS ESSENTIAL IN OUR INCREASINGLY URBANISED WORLD

What is Intelligent Mobility and why does it matter?

A growing, ageing population and the rapid depletion of our traditional energy resources, and the corresponding impact on the environment, are arguably the three biggest drivers of change in today’s global economy. A fourth is urbanisation.

Seven years ago, United Nations figures estimated that the number of people living in cities around the world had for the first time surpassed the number of rural residents. The same report predicted city dwellers would account for 70 per cent of the world’s population by 2050.

With people and businesses clearly seeing strong benefits in being physically close to other people and businesses, this presents significant challenges for those in charge of city planning and infrastructure. Of course, technological advances in areas such as augmented-reality and 3D printing could soon render

unnecessary some of our journeys and deliveries. But the smooth movement of growing numbers of people around the world’s already congested global cities won't be solved by technology alone. It is how we deploy technology that will determine which cities prevail.

Equally, a mind shift is needed among policymakers, industry and the public that focuses more on

end-to-end journeys and less on individual modes of transport – on mobility rather than transport. Intelligent Mobility, if you will.

Recent improvements in route-planning software that consider multiple transport modes is an example of the first steps being taken towards achieving this, but there is still a long way to go. Part of our remit at the Transport Systems Catapult is to overcome the silo thinking that has typically dogged the transport sector, and encourage collaboration among all transport providers.

Of course, it is easy to dismiss talk about connected journeys and smoothly running transport systems as something that would be “nice to have” by authorities whose efforts are focused on “bigger issues” such as healthcare provision and revenue raising. But Intelligent Mobility is crucial to a city’s wellbeing and prosperity, and will become essential in the years to come. People and businesses function best when they are close to other people and businesses. While connectivity between different cities will continue to be of major importance, the risk of increased congestion within our rapidly growing global cities will ensure that the efficient movement of people and goods inside the city limits is of equal importance.

Research by architect and urban planning consultant Tim Stonor found that the most connected city areas are more successful at attracting retailers and generating high property prices than their less connected counterparts. This demonstrates how cities can

improve their citizens’ quality of life by using intelligent systems to improve mobility, rather than resorting to the old (and expensive) approach of simply throwing more infrastructure at the problem.

It should offer comfort to transport providers and city authorities to know that more can

be achieved with less. Important too that authorities see improved transport systems not just as something that needs funding, but as a long-term revenue source.

A recent study into the business potential of Intelligent Mobility suggests that the global market for this new sector will be worth around £900bn per year in just more than a decade; our vision at the Transport Systems Catapult is to help unlock that commercial potential. How? By bridging the so-called “valley of death”, when great ideas are born but fail to achieve

commercial reality, often because an SME or research organisation lacks the business knowledge and contacts to turn their invention into a successful product or service.

One example is the LUTZ Pathfinder programme. Managed by the Catapult on behalf of the UK Automotive Council, this project will trial three self-driving pods on the pavements of Milton Keynes, with a focus on “last-mile” journeys. The vehicle’s developer, RDM Group, is an example of how the Catapult's projects serve as springboards for growth. Since winning the LUTZ contract, RDM has won a major government contract and is being courted by potential clients worldwide.

In another project, a move away from silo thinking has resulted in a data-sharing exercise that is delivering economic, environmental and customer benefits across the UK air transport network. Elsewhere, the Innovation in Rail Franchising initiative looks set to transform the rail travel experience.

Many projects are informed by and feed into the Catapult's data visualisation programme, which, by deploying and visualising data holds huge potential for Intelligent Mobility. This enhanced use of data is only possible because of the explosion in digital connectivity, and as this paves the way for transport connectivity, the impacts could be significant. Cities that get it right will be amazing places indeed.

This pageSteve Yianni: the cities that embrace intelligent mobility are the cities that will thrive

OppositeVisitors to the Transport Systems Catapult's headquarters explore its data visualisation resources

CHAMPIONING INTELLIGENT MOBILITY: ABOUT THE CATAPULT

Our VisionTo ‘Drive UK global leadership in Intelligent Mobility – promoting sustained economic growth and wellbeing through integrated, efficient, and sustainable transport’

Our Goals• Growth and Jobs • Global Success for UK

Businesses• Improved Journeys • World-leader in

Intelligent Mobility • Thriving Organisation

that Delivers on Commitments

Our Business Units• Automated Transport

Systems: a key area for growing UK capability for Intelligent Mobility, covering automation in movement of people and goods.

• Modelling and Visualisation: developing and demonstrating new technological capabilities in order to better understand the benefits of Intelligent Mobility and to promote a ‘whole system’ approach.

• Information Exploitation: capitalising on existing datasets to facilitate the development of new applications, insights and capabilities that enable Intelligent Mobility.

• Customer Experience: facilitating the move towards a seamless and user-focused journey, in which the transport system is entirely adaptive and responsive to user needs.

INTELLIGENT MOBILITY IS NOT JUST A 'NICE TO HAVE'. IT IS CRUCIAL TO A CITY’S WELLBEING AND PROSPERITY, AND WILL BECOME ESSENTIAL IN THE YEARS TO COME

INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION

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The saying that ‘good things come in small packages’ certainly rings true when it comes to the LUTZ

Pathfinder pods – the small, two-seater, driverless vehicles that are soon set to roll along pedestrianised areas of Milton Keynes. Launched in February, these pioneering pods are enabling the UK’s first public-space trials of driverless technology, and, crucially, providing valuable business opportunities for small and medium-sized companies.

The LUTZ Pathfinder project was one of the first to be picked up by the Transport Systems Catapult, following enthusiastic conversations with the Automotive Council UK, a group of senior figures across the automotive industry and government.

“The Automotive Council discussed everything from the current situation – where cars can park themselves or control their speed using adaptive cruise control – right through to the future vision of having vehicles that

drive themselves in all scenarios,” says Neil Fulton, Programme Director of the Transport Systems Catapult’s Automated Transport Systems (ATS) unit.

One way of walking through the steps needed to achieve this vision was to run a project that would use a different environment to a road, whereby the autonomous vehicles could learn the information they needed through interaction with pedestrians, cyclists or other obstacles.

The end result is a pod that will be trialled on pedestrianised areas of Milton Keynes at variable speeds of up to 24kph.

The vehicles are fully designed and built in the UK, tapping into the UK’s expertise in the automotive and autonomous robotics sectors. Constructed by Coventry-based RDM Group, the pods use navigation and control systems developed by Oxford University’s Mobile Robotics Group.

The vehicles are also sustainably run on a lithium ion battery connected to an electric

motor, which can be recharged in a similar way to existing models of electric car. Such vehicles have huge implications for addressing climate change: road transport currently contributes about one-fifth of the EU's total CO² emissions, which could be significantly reduced with the advent of ‘cleaner’ cars. A recent report by the Intelligent Transportation Society of America found that 'intelligent transportation systems’, including autonomous cars, could achieve a 2-4% reduction in oil consumption and related greenhouse gas emissions each year over the next decade.

At the moment, progress is being made slowly and carefully. The LUTZ Pathfinder rollout is limited to the three pods that are being introduced in Milton Keynes later this year. The trial, Fulton says, will serve to gauge public perception – a vital piece of the autonomous driving puzzle.

“We will be engaging with members of the public and the different interest groups that might end up either using these

OppositeThe launch of LUTZ Pathfinder is significant not just for future travel, but for British business too

Driving changeMAKING THEIR DEBUT ON PEDESTRIANISED AREAS OF MILTON KEYNES THIS SUMMER, THESE DRIVERLESS PODS MAY BE SMALL, BUT THEY ARE EXPECTED TO HAVE A BIG IMPACT ON HOW WE WILL TRAVEL IN THE FUTURE

AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES

IMPACT / 0908 / IMPACT

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LIDARS

LIDARS

RADARS

RADARS

PARKING SENSORS

CAMERA

CAMERA

vehicles or are affected by them, and we want to address as many of their concerns as possible.”

More driverless pods are already on the way to Milton Keynes, however, with a total of 40 such vehicles commissioned from RDM for the UK Autodrive project, which will trial not only pods, but also regular road-based cars equipped with autonomous and connected-car technologies.

Fulton envisions the ultimate use of autonomous vehicles in Milton Keynes as a way of seamlessly linking different parts of the town.

“Milton Keynes has a lot of housing estates around the city

centre, so people travel from those estates to the centre and park their cars. A lot of the time, it's only a mile away, but walking and cycling are not possibilities for everyone, especially the older population. We want to prevent cars sitting around in a car park for eight hours, and to change the way people think about mobility here.”

Geoff Snelson, Director of Strategy at Milton Keynes Council, says that the town is an urban laboratory well suited to this kind of disruptor. But he adds that the technology is no novelty.

“Milton Keynes has both a track record for innovation and a risk appetite which has seen us

SME ON THE WORLD MAP

RDM Group was selected after an open European tender to find a manufacturer that could build the LUTZ Pathfinder pods. CEO David Keene (pictured) explains how winning the contract boosted interest in the small, Coventry-based business.

"RDM has made products and provided engineering services for the automotive sector for 22 years. We have about 100 customers, the largest of whom include Jaguar Land Rover and Aston Martin.

“For this particular prototype, which is predominantly made to operate on pathways, we've had a lot of interest from eco-towns around the world. All these pods communicate with each other, so they know where each other are: in time, they'll be like lawnmowers that operate on their own – when they run out of power, they park themselves on a charger. It's a steep learning curve and we're leading the field, which is exciting for us as an SME.

“There's been huge interest and many conversations with some of the world's largest companies. It has led to other projects, such as our becoming partners in the UK Autodrive consortium, that will see us producing another 40 pods. It's put us on the world map. The NYT and Washington Post both wrote articles mentioning us in the same breath as Google Cars and Uber. You can't buy that type of press.”

investment of nearly £40m, and in March the government announced the creation of a £200m investment fund (half-financed by the state and half by industry) to enhance the development of driverless car technology and the systems required to implement and adopt the technology.

In the UK alone the scope is significant. A study from KPMG, commissioned by The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, found the development of connected and autonomous vehicles could help “create an additional 320,000 jobs in the UK by 2030, 25,000 of which would be in automotive manufacturing”, and deliver social and economic benefits of around £51bn per year.

One institution that has already benefited is Oxford University.

Professor Paul Newman heads up the university’s Mobile Robotics Group, which supplies the pods' sensor and navigation technology.

“The pod has got a memory of what the city should look like, but that's not enough – it's got to have its eyes open,” says Newman. He adds that the beauty of the technology is that it can be used across myriad sectors and capabilities.

His team are inputting data from pedestrianised areas into the autonomy control system (ACS). This involves mapping using stereo cameras and laser scanners so that the ACS can “learn” how Milton Keynes looks in varying light conditions and weather.

And, says Newman, the science has ramifications beyond transport and mobility. “The 3D

taking on a portfolio of smart city projects. We were one of the UK's first three ‘Plugged-in Places’ for electric car charging.

“The plan is for the driverless pods to run as an on-demand service that will integrate with other modes of transport. The vehicles will drop the passenger at their destination of choice, then move autonomously to pick up another passenger from elsewhere. We believe this responsiveness to the needs of users will help reduce the reliance on the car for bespoke journeys to city-centre destinations.”

Beyond Milton Keynes, the UK has a strong track record when it comes to both the history and the technology of the automotive vehicle and is similarly well placed in the development of driverless vehicle technology. The fact that the UK did not ratify the 1968 Vienna Convention on Road Traffic – which requires that "every moving vehicle or combination of vehicles shall have a driver" – is widely seen as an advantage that has allowed the country to move ahead with autonomous vehicle trials without the need for new legislation.

Further proof of the country’s willingness to invest in this area can be seen in the projects that are already set to follow. UK Autodrive, for example, is just one of three separate consortia exploring these technologies as part of the UK government’s 'Introducing Driverless Cars to UK Roads' competition. Taken together, those three programmes already represent a public-private

Left How the pods will look on the streets of Milton Keynes

Opposite Early prototype sketch »

DRIVERLESS CARS ARE THE FUTURE. I WANT BRITAIN TO BE AT THE FOREFRONT OF THIS EXCITING NEW DEVELOPMENT, TO EMBRACE A TECHNOLOGY THAT COULD TRANSFORM OUR ROADS AND OPEN UP A BRAND NEW ROUTE FOR GLOBAL INVESTMENTTRANSPORT MINISTER CLAIRE PERRY, MP

40Autonomous vehicles are commissioned from RDM for the UK Autodrive project, which will trial not only pods, but also regular vehicles equipped with autonomous and connected-car technologies

320KThe number of jobs that could be created in the UK by 2030 thanks to the development of the connected and autonomous vehicle sector

AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES

IMPACT / 1110 / IMPACT

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ENVI

RO

NM

ENTA

L C

OM

PLE

XITY

Adaptive Cruise Control

ParkingAssist

Personal Rapid Transit

Automated Metro

Automated Parking

Traffic Jam Assist

HighwayAutopilot

Platooning

UrbanDriving

FullyAutomated

Vehicle

Auto ValetParking

LUTZ Pathfinder

Pod

CityMobil2Shuttle

UK Autodrive

Pod

LEVEL OF AUTOMATION

LEVEL 1

DriverAssistance

LEVEL 2

PartialAutomation

LEVEL 3

ConditionalAutomation

LEVEL 4

HighAutomation

LEVEL 5

FullAutomation

maps we're using to build these vehicles’ memories have massive implications for companies that look after road infrastructure, people who are inspecting nuclear plants, building surveys that figure out where all the ducting is in a building.”

In the meantime, the advent of autonomous vehicles is expected to change how we perceive car ownership. Instead of seeing the car as a status symbol, people are likely to regard it as an on-demand service, which must accommodate our schedules in an efficient, safe, and eco-friendly manner.

This flexibility could extend to delivering goods as well as people. “If the car isn’t being used to carry people around at night,” Fulton says, “why not reallocate it to the movement of goods? For

The LUTZ Pathfinder project sits within the Transport Systems Catapult’s Automated Transport Systems (ATS) unit, whose focus is on supporting the growth of UK capability in the movement towards increased automation in

the movement of people and goods. The unit also oversees the Catapult's involvement in the UK Autodrive consortium, which will trial driverless technology in pods and regular cars in Milton Keynes and Coventry, and is also

participating in the EU-funded ITS Observatory project which is building a software platform that will give transport planning decision-makers shared access to resources and knowledge in Intelligent Transport Systems.

BelowAn early prototype sketch of the interior

example, you could have a pod making deliveries to small shops – you don't need trucks arriving in London to do that.”

Connected cars also take away the element of human fallibility, which is estimated to be at least partly responsible for more

THERE'S BEEN A HUGE AMOUNT OF INTEREST AND MANY CONVERSATIONS WITH SOME OF THE LARGEST COMPANIES IN THE WORLD. IT HAS PUT US ON THE WORLD MAP; WITHOUT THE LUTZ CONTRACT, THERE’S NO WAY WE WOULD HAVE ATTAINED THIS KIND OF RECOGNITIONRDM CEO DAVID KEENE

than 90 per cent of road traffic accidents. The KPMG/SMMT report predicted that connected and autonomous vehicles would save over 2,500 lives annually and prevent more than 25,000 serious accidents in the UK alone.

Back at Milton Keynes Council, Geoff Snelson predicts that once people become comfortable with giving away control to their car, they will start to view autonomous vehicles as a service.

“Even the motor manufacturers understand that in the long-term, they won’t necessarily be just manufacturers of cars – what they will be is transportation services. I might have a subscription that could provide me with a seat on a shared minibus to work, or a van to move my daughter into her university halls. The benefits to a car being driverless – as well as safety and ease – are that they will sit as part of an on-demand and bookable transportation system.”

As we progress closer to full automation, the benefits will become increasingly clear.

Reduced congestion, fewer car-related deaths, an easing of pressure on our natural resources, more flexible mobility, and a myriad of opportunities that pioneering small businesses can grasp before bigger companies get involved. All that’s needed now is for technology and society to catch up.

INTRODUCING THE AUTOMATED TRANSPORT SYSTEMS UNITPathway to automation

AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES

IMPACT / 1312 / IMPACT

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Innovation on trackFOR YEARS THE RAILWAY SYSTEM HAS BEEN CHALLENGED TO IMPROVE ON CUSTOMER SATISFACTION. NOW, THANKS TO A HEALTHY DOSE OF INVESTMENT IN INNOVATION AND REVAMPED CONTRACTUAL GUIDELINES, THAT’S FINALLY ABOUT TO CHANGE

OppositeThe rail sector is crying out for innovation

You’re at the railway station and your smartphone has just sent you a notification. Your train is about to arrive.

You don’t have to crane your neck towards a sign to discover which platform you should sprint towards. Way-finding across the station is digital, easy-to-read and abundant. No need to sift through your pockets to find your ticket – ticketless technology put an end to all of that. There are no feisty barriers to battle, you do not have to touch in or touch out. All that’s required is that you meander towards the train.

As you walk by the carriages, your phone will tell you which seats are free. You don’t have to haul your elbow-knocking baggage through a narrow aisle. Bulky luggage is transported separately now. You can collect it when you alight or choose to have it delivered to your front door.

After you take your seat, you want to continue reading that article on your tablet. Thankfully, Wi-Fi is free and reliable – and will remain so during the entire journey.

For the millions of Britons who use trains, this sounds like an excellent but unlikely scenario. Their complaints of the current rail system are well known: it’s too expensive, crowded, and plagued by delays. For years, they would say, prices have increased quicker than their salaries and they are yet to feel any positive changes. From booking a ticket to getting a refund if a train is late, the system is sluggish. It’s a service, unlike aviation and automotive, not particularly associated with innovation, whether fairly or not. A perceived lack of investment, coupled with an unsupportive contractual framework, has resulted in dissatisfied passengers.

“One of the barriers the industry has had is a lack of funding in innovation. Despite what’s in the media, train-operating companies (TOCs) are not terribly profitable businesses compared to other sectors,” says Andrew Payne of the Transport Systems Catapult, which is spearheading a push for greater modernisation through the Innovation in Rail Franchising programme. “They have pretty limited cash and make about 3% profit. They are lean and thinly capitalised companies operating in a challenging environment. They operate a franchise for a relatively short period of time, and investing in long-term innovation is really not on the radar for people, especially when that innovation might only pay back beyond their particular franchise life. It’s not really in their commercial interests, because they may not win the next round.” »

CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

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INTRODUCING THE CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE UNIT

Catalysing the move towards a seamless, user-focused journey, in which the transport system is adaptive and responsive to the needs of people and companies, requires

great organisation. The Innovation in Rail Franchising team works within the Customer Experience unit, which focuses on end-to-end journeys. The strategic focus of this unit includes

developing a unique capability in the whole journey experience. It grows end-to-end journey insight capacity and innovation management expertise to deliver step change.

On average UK industries invest about 1.7% of turnover in research and development, compared with estimates of 0.1 to 0.3% for rail operators. Where manufacturers of train carriages might invest up to 6% of their turnover, aeronautics and airlines devote 9%, while high-tech companies spend around 15%. With greater investment, Payne says, innovation could flourish and bring that perfect train journey far closer. “We're embedding innovation into the heart of rail franchising to deliver better customer outcomes for the whole end-to-end journey experience.”

Efficient connections between rail services and other modes of transport, better technology, and smarter digital systems for both operators and customers are just some of the benefits of investment.

While updating the system sounds expensive, investment in innovation is proved to reduce costs in the long-term. Consider this: currently, traditional paper tickets cost the rail industry £500m, an amount that could be greatly reduced by smart technology.

The number of people travelling by train is close to record. In 2013 to 2014, 1.59bn passenger journeys were made in Great Britain on franchised passenger operators, the highest recorded figure since the series began in 2002-03. This was an increase of 5.7% on the 1.5bn passenger journeys recorded in 2012-13.

But Transport Focus, an independent consumer watchdog, reported that nationally the percentage of passengers satisfied

with their journey overall was 81% in its Autumn 2014 report. That might sound high, but it’s down 2% from 83% from a year earlier – a small but significant drop. Customer satisfaction, according to this report, is at its lowest in four years.

So what do the people want? Open to the public, a consultation in February with train passengers in East Anglia raised some ideas. Over a series of consultation workshops organised by the Transport Systems Catapult with the support of the Department for Transport (DfT), the consultation aimed to produce feedback to share with the TOCs bidding for the East Anglia Rail franchise. These results would challenge those bidders to be as “innovative as possible” and use experiences from other sectors to provide the customer

with a much-improved service and promises of a better future.

“Some of the findings were things like customer intimacy – people want a personalised experience. They want to be able to book a ticket that’s end-to-end so it includes their car parking, seat on the train, locally sourced food in the café and everything at the other end, such as connections. They want real live information on trains, like when the train they are travelling on is going to arrive, which platform it will be at and, obviously, the standard free Wi-Fi. People also want a lot more when it comes to getting a refund.

“For example, some customers and stakeholders demanded new ways of recompensing for delays such as accumulator points. If your train is late by about five minutes, five minutes goes into your little

pot. All of the minutes you’re made late accumulate over time and you will be refunded accordingly. This is just one illustration of how people see the need for technology and the industry to raise the bar.”

Another way to improve services is to harness big data, an increasingly available resource, as a monitoring tool. Sentiment mapping is high on the agenda at the Transport Systems Catapult and the number of transport-related apps is set to increase.

The spin-off benefits from innovation investment, in terms of new companies and small business, include the combining of data. “This opens new opportunities for not just those who use it in this country, but those who are potentially exporting it too,” says Payne. “At a global level, there’s a massive export market on Intelligent Mobility.”

Indeed, the Catapult has already had visits from companies and organisations from Spain to Saudi, and Malaysia to Taiwan.

One British company, DeltaRail, is already on the case using real-time data. Its app, Commuteclub,

scans tens of thousands of tweets a week about London’s trains and lets passengers know where the problems are. And it’s quicker at doing so than National Rail.

“Our solutions gather consumer feedback by monitoring social media channels,” explains Daren Wood, Solutions Development Director at DeltaRail. “Not only are we using this to monitor the consequences of the decisions we support, but we are also responding with tailored consumer information to inform and empower travellers and nudge them onto services that better fit their whole-journey needs.”

It is initiatives such as these that will bring rail in line with other transport industries. “The UK is in a position where productivity, innovation and growth just can’t stagnate,” says Payne. “Unless rail improves its game, it’s going to find itself outstripped by driverless cars and autonomous vehicles. It will be under huge pressure as passengers experience profoundly better journeys on other modes.”

Fostering smart technology, however, comes with challenges.

In the new rail franchise competitions, TOCs need to have an innovation strategy.

“Some companies struggle to adopt a new mind-set. They haven’t had a Research and Development Manager, they haven’t had an Innovation Director, they haven’t really had an innovation programme. The industry is moving and the early signs from leading companies is very encouraging.”

As well as enabling new ways of thinking, progress will require TOCs to communicate more with one another. High levels of commercial rivalry, a symptom of a challenging contractual framework, had previously hindered such openness.

The UK rail market is split into a number of separate franchises, which are awarded by the Government for set time periods of eight to 10 years. TOCs bid to operate on the basis of

Above Apps could transform the rail passenger experience

Opposite The Transport Systems Catapult hosts a workshop on Residual Value in July 2014

»

£48mLaunched in March, the Innovation Fund went live with three major franchises: East Coast, Northern, and Trans-Pennine. It is valued at £48m

1.6bnIn 2013-14, 1.59bn passenger journeys were made in Great Britain on franchised passenger operators

CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

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CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

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MINORDELAYS

1

PURCHASE YOUR TICKET VIA SMARTPHONE APP.

INCLUDES PRE-BOOKED TAXI AT DESTINATION

2

ARRIVE AT RAILWAY STATION TO A TEXT

MESSAGE ALERTING YOU TO YOUR PLATFORM

NUMBER AND NOTIFYING YOU OF SLIGHT DELAY

4PICK UP A COFFEE AND

PASTRY AT THE STATION CAFÉ. THE PRICE IS INCLUDED IN

YOUR TICKET

7

FREE, RELIABLE WI-FI ENABLES YOU TO FINISH THAT PRESENTATION OR CONTINUE

READING THAT ARTICLE ON YOUR TABLET

10TEXT MESSAGE ALERTS YOU THAT LATE-TRAIN REFUND HAS BEEN TRANSFERRED DIRECT TO YOUR ACCOUNT

9ARRIVE AT YOUR FINAL DESTINATION – AT THE

SAME TIME AS YOUR LARGE-ITEM LUGGAGE

5

HEAD STRAIGHT FOR YOUR TRAIN –

TICKETLESS TECHNOLOGY

DISPENSES WITH THE NEED FOR BARRIERS

6

TEXT MESSAGE POINTS YOU IN DIRECTION OF

NEAREST AVAILABLE SEATS

8ONCE AT YOUR

DESTINATION, HAIL A TAXI. THE FARE IS INCLUDED IN

YOUR TICKET PRICE

P2

3

DROP BULKY LUGGAGE AT COLLECTION POINT. THIS WILL BE TRANSPORTED SEPARATELY

AND CAN BE DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR AT YOUR

FINAL DESTINATION

REFUNDRECEIVED

THE INNOVATION FUND

A Transport Systems Catapult project has helped develop a major fund as part of the franchising process that aims to stimulate new investments in innovation. The three elements of improved procurement process, funding for innovation, and building industry capability both in people and organisations are essential to help meet the UK’s ambition of securing a world-class railway.

Launched in March 2015, the scheme went live with three major franchises: East Coast, Northern and Trans-Pennine – and is valued at £48m. In the pilot rail franchises, 1% of turnover is ring-fenced towards innovation, helping to create demonstrators and de-risk innovation. The target for the pilot is a 4:1 return on investment as a portfolio, to encourage a strong but balanced approach to risk-taking and innovation.

A neutral industry body – part of the Rail Delivery Group and chaired by the Catapult’s CEO Steve Yianni (pictured) – assists in selecting innovative projects that are in the best interest of the industry and customers. The Transport Systems Catapult, with innovation partners Future Railway and the Rail Delivery Group, works to ensure the right environment for innovation and subsequent successful adoption of new services, ideas and products.

specifications set by the DfT. But many consider the period as too short and therefore unsupportive of investment towards the end of the cycle, or receive what's called residual value. Such uncertainties have contributed to a lack of appetite. Historically, over 50% of investments in a franchise are made by the end of the second year, and 90% by the fourth year.

“Additional investment will help smooth peaks and troughs for industries; there will be less of a boom-bust cycle in every franchise,” says Payne. “The ability to innovate in rail is perceived as risky. The Transport Systems Catapult aims to de-risk innovation.”

Keen to promote long-term investment, a group has emerged to cultivate a better environment founded on trust and collaboration. Rail Executive, the Transport Systems Catapult and Future Railway have all worked to create a refreshed residual value mechanism worth £75m for each newly bid franchise and open for negotiation each franchise that’s currently ‘in life’. “Operators have not been incentivised to invest beyond the end of the franchise, unless they take on the residual value risk of these assets,” the group’s members say.

One solution is to transfer assets between operators. For example, if there were a case for rebuilding a car park towards the end of current X operator’s cycle, incoming Y operator would be obliged to take it on at an agreed cost. To make things fair, X operator would recoup the value beyond its franchise time – thus providing some incentive.

It is passengers who would essentially pay for such innovation, says Peter Wilkinson, Rail Executive’s Managing Director, and therefore industry must take heed of their demands. “Innovation isn’t a choice or a fad,” he says. “It’s about consistently re-doubling our efforts to centre all of our thinking on exceeding ever-changing expectations. Transport Catapult is an essential ingredient in the quest and I commend the team for their success in helping us shape a passenger-centric future.

“Who would doubt that the future of this railway lies in the hands of those who are principally paying for it: fare-payers, passengers. Anyone paying attention to what our funders – the passengers – are telling us about what they want from the railway will understand that standing still isn’t an option.”

INNOVATION ISN'T A CHOICE OR A FAD. IT'S ABOUT CONSISTENTLY RE-DOUBLING OUR EFFORTS TO CENTRE ALL OUR THINKING ON EXCEEDING EVER-CHANGING EXPECTATIONS. TRANSPORT CATAPULT IS AN ESSENTIAL INGREDIENT IN THE QUEST AND I COMMEND THE TEAM FOR THEIR SUCCESS IN HELPING US CREATE A PASSENGER-CENTRIC FUTUREMANAGING DIRECTOR, RAIL EXECUTIVE, PETER WILKINSON

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University of Nottingham

University of Leicester

University of Sheffield

University of Leeds

University of Aberdeen

University of Cambridge

University of Southampton

Cranfield University

Coventry University

Sheffield Hallam University

Loughborough University

Nottingham Trent University

Heriot-Watt University

De Montfort University, Leicester

OppositeThe Transport Systems Catapult is working hand-in-hand with 14 universities nationwide

Tapping into Britain’s best minds, the Transport Systems Catapult has partnered with 14

universities across the UK to create a long-lasting bond between academia and industry.

“The University Partnership Programme brings universities and businesses together to work on solutions to the most pressing transport challenges, and make those ideas a commercial success," says Dr Paul Zanelli, Chief Technical Officer at the Transport Systems Catapult.

The scheme enhances the Catapult's activities in different regions and provides a network of expertise that will help businesses access the latest academic research.

Organised in eight regional hubs, the partners are: Aberdeen University, Coventry University, Cranfield University, De Montfort University, Heriot Watt, Leeds

University, Leicester University, Loughborough University, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham University, Sheffield Hallam University, Southampton University, University of Cambridge, and University of Sheffield. The Catapult continues to seek additional partners and works with other universities on individual projects and collaborations.

“This partnership allows us to test ideas at an early stage,” says Sarah Sharples, Professor of Human Factors at the University of Nottingham’s Engineering faculty. “The award has significantly increased the visibility and integration of the internationally leading research activities in customer experience, intelligent infrastructure and future transport systems that are already conducted at the Universities of Nottingham and Leicester.”

As part of that East Midlands collaboration, known as IMPACT,

two studentships have been established to work with the Catapult directly. One PhD project explores issues with human and mechanical control in automated vehicles; the second focuses on the potential value of crowd-sourced journey and smart card data for inferring average transit delays and maps.

In March, the universities of Nottingham and Leicester held a joint event, ‘Space Technology Solutions for Urban Transport’, aimed at bringing together SMEs, local authorities, and academia.

Separately, plans are under way to use the University of Nottingham as an Intelligent Mobility test bed. “We are in the early stages of exploring future transport access around campus," says Sharples. "This could be anything from investment in infrastructure generally to the lighting used to help people move around in the evening.

“The partnership with the Catapult enhances our links with industry and policy-makers, and we are confident it will lead to future collaborative research and development activities with clear impact to the UK as a whole.”

Elsewhere, the Catapult is developing a ‘Traffic Control Test-bed’ with the universities of Southampton, Bristol and York. “The idea is to build on a prototype simulation test-bed built by Dr Simon Box at Southampton to host an international facility for the benchmarking of alternative algorithms for traffic control,” says Robin North, Principal Technologist at the Transport Systems Catapult.

From brains to businessTHE TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT HAS STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS WITH 14 UK UNIVERSITIES TO TURN THE UK'S BEST IDEAS INTO COMMERCIAL SUCCESS

UNIVERSITY PARTNER PROGRAMME UNIVERSITY PARTNER PROGRAMME

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»

3%

REDUCTION IN START-UP

DELAYS

5%

REDUCTION IN ATFM DELAYS

SAVINGS

£750K

blue-skythinkingMAXIMISING THE EFFICIENCY OF UK AIRSPACE AND REDUCING DELAYS IS ESSENTIAL TO ENSURE THE UK MAINTAINS ITS COMPETITIVE EDGE IN AN AGE OF INCREASING GLOBAL TRAVEL. THE TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT IS USING AN INVESTMENT OF £750,000 TO INCREASE THE SOPHISTICATION OF AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS AT AIRPORTS ACROSS THE COUNTRY – WITH A LIKELY BENEFIT OF UP TO £10M OVER FIVE YEARS

Air travel is key to the UK economy to the tune of about £18bn a year, but maintaining

and improving the efficiency of our airspace is a continuous challenge. Furthermore, passengers hate it when their plane is late – and with delays costing over £33 a minute, airlines hate it too. But with more than 6,000 planes a day travelling through UK controlled airspace, keeping everything on time is a significant challenge.

Maximising the safe, efficient and reliable use of UK airspace is

a priority for the Future Airspace Strategy (FAS). Working in partnership with NATS (which provides air traffic navigation services within the UK) and the CAA (the UK’s specialist aviation regulator), Transport Systems Catapult is leading the Departure Planning Information (DPI) Project, in which they have invested £750,000. The project is expected to cut delays and lead to benefits of up to £10m over the next five years, based on fuel savings and delay savings.

DPI provides real-time information to air traffic network managers about what aircraft are doing at key stages while they are on the ground just prior to take off (from when the plane is cleared to move off stand, to when it is taxiing, and has taken off). With this real-time picture, air traffic network managers have more accurate predictions of the departure time. Sharing this data with the European network helps reduce pan-European air traffic flow restrictions, and, crucially for passengers, helps improve departure times.

DPI was already in operation at Heathrow and Gatwick, as part of a wider suite of systems and tools that help manage aircraft movements on the ground at the UK’s largest airports.

The challenge was to find a cost-effective way of providing DPI to other UK airports.

To do this, the Catapult first worked closely with NATS and EuroControl (the European oganisation for the safety of air navigation) to upgrade air traffic control systems at seven airports with electronic flight progress strips: London City, Stansted, Manchester, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Luton. As of January 2015, DPI had been successfully deployed for trial across these airports. Offline trials showed a 60% improvement in the accuracy

OppositeDPI charts on-the-ground aircraft activity

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STANSTED SUCCESS STORY

Stansted was among the airports chosen for the Transport Systems Catapult’s DPI project.

The airport uses a software product known as EFPS (Electronic Flight Progress Strips), to which DPI was added before going live. The additional information provided by DPI has helped to pinpoint exactly when a flight will become airborne.

Duncan Smith, Operations Manager at Stansted Airport, has been pleased with the results: “The benefits are increased on-time performance, a cut down in runway occupancy times and less holding times for aircraft,” he says

“The subsequent benefit of that is less fuel burn, and less aircraft emissions, which is a win for everybody.”

The Transport Systems Catapult’s Krishna Ramcharran, Programme Manager for DPI, hopes the improvements seen at Stansted will be replicated as DPI is rolled out across the UK: “Based on the trials we have done at Stansted, we are reducing the inaccuracy in departure times by about 60%, from ten minutes down to about four minutes.

"When you multiply that up by the number of aircraft flying about in UK airspace, saving three/four minutes per aircraft will have a huge effect.”

of predicted flight take-off times. The system is now fully operational at London City, Manchester and Aberdeen, and will be live at the remaining four airports by July 2015.

“Taken together with the information already provided by Heathrow and Gatwick, DPI now covers around 70% of the UK’s commercial flights, with initial offline tests showing an improvement of around 60% in predicting actual take-off times of aircraft,” says Steve Yianni, CEO of the Transport Systems Catapult. The scale of the DPI roll-out means the UK is setting the bar for provision of such information into the European network manager, while also helping airlines reduce fuel costs and cut pollution.

The next step for the Catapult was to find a cost-effective scalable solution for regional airports that use paper flight strips instead of electronic flight strip systems. This March, the Transport Systems

Catapult signed an agreement with Lockheed Martin (after a public procurement process) to develop and deploy a DPI solution to four regional airports, and is working with Future Airspace Strategy to secure funding to deploy the system to up to a further 20 UK regional airports.

To fully understand the benefits of DPI, it helps to know more about how aircraft are managed.

After an aircraft takes off, real-time information provides air traffic network managers with details of its location at any given moment. But it is a different story while the plane is still on the ground, where air traffic network managers are reliant on accurate updates being passed from the airport ATC (air traffic control) towers, and this is not always possible.

Air traffic network managers in the UK and Europe have the task of managing hundreds of traffic flows; without DPI, they are missing accurate information about when

departing aircraft are going to take-off and enter the airspace. The cost to a regional airport of installing DPI was seemingly prohibitive as it was an investment that would in many ways be of more benefit to network managers and the airlines (through fuel savings) rather than airports themselves. To complicate matters, airport ownership is diverse and the technology used at each one differs.

The Catapult was uniquely placed to act as a third-party broker between the CAA, NATS and the various airports. By securing funding from the Department for Transport to accelerate the programme, the full costs of developing the DPI capability was no longer the responsibility of regional airports.

The CAA’s Director Safety & Airspace Regulation Mark Swan is clear about the benefits of this approach: “The Transport Systems Catapult has been fabulous. We set out a really difficult problem

and they have come in with highly motivated people, with a very clear project plan and they showed the industry you could do this – all in the space of about 12 months.”

The delays that the Transport Systems Catapult hoped to target with its project are divided into three key areas. The first are the

so-called start-up delays. These occur before an aircraft receives clearance to push back from its stand. Clearance may be delayed for various reasons, including capacity limitations in the network due to lack of accurate information.At this point, it may be burning fuel, albeit less than if it was flying; a

THE ADVANTAGE OF THE TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT IS THAT IT ACTED ON BEHALF OF LOTS OF STAKEHOLDERS TO BRING TOGETHER A GROUP OF AIRPORTS TO GO THROUGH A PROJECT TOGETHER, RATHER THAN TRYING TO DO IT PIECEMEALNATS GENERAL MANAGER OF CUSTOMER AFFAIRS ANDY SHAND

delay here will cost an airline in the region of £42 a minute. In the 12 months to January 2013, UK airports recorded over 700,000 minutes of start-up delay, so reducing this figure has a clear financial benefit. The DPI project hopes to achieve a 3% reduction, equivalent to around £882,000 per year.

The second key area takes into account delays that occur when an aircraft is in the air, known as Air Traffic Flow Management (ATFM) delays. The UK has an unusually busy airspace.

£10mThe DPI project identified that an investment of £750,000 could cut delays, leading to benefits of up to £10m over the next five years

60%The Catapult's work is reducing inaccuracies in departure times by about 60%, from ten minutes down to four minutes

OppositeDPI will reduce delays and their impact

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THE PROBLEM Planes unable to take off at the allotted time

THE COST£42 per minute

@ 700,000 minutesper annum

THE PROBLEM Planes delayed

once in air

THE COST £54 per minute

@ 200,000 minutesper annum

THE PROBLEMPlanes stacked in holding pattern

Start-up delays

PROJECTED SAVINGS THANKS TO DPI

3% or £882,000 per annum

PROJECTED SAVINGSTHANKS TO DPI

5% or £540,000 per annum

Air traffic flow management delays

31 2

PROJECTED SAVINGSTHANKS TO DPI

£750,000 per year, including broader societal benefits

associated with reductions in CO2 emissions

Arrival management

With many large airports within a reasonably small area, a problem at one airport can easily lead to crowding at pinch points in the network. If this happens, in order to maintain safety, air traffic control will direct aircraft to slow down, re-route or fly at a less efficient altitude. It is estimated that the total level of UK en-route ATFM delay is 200,000 minutes a year, at least 5% of which is generated by a lack of accurate departure information. In financial terms, each minute of ATFM delay is estimated to cost £54. A 5% reduction in ATFM is equivalent to over £540,000 in direct financial savings.

The third key area identified is during arrivals. It is 90% more fuel efficient for an aircraft to slow down while cruising or descending than to be held in a stack. NATS, in partnership with other industry stakeholders, has implemented an arrival management capability for flights inbound to London Heathrow, so that delay is absorbed prior to the holding stacks, thereby reducing the time spent in the stack, thus saving on fuel and CO2 emissions.

This capability is enhanced by the provision of DPI messages, which feed more accurate information into the arrival management system, enabling further reductions in stack holding. The Transport Systems Catapult estimates its contribution will be worth up to £750,000 per year, including the broader societal benefits associated with reductions in CO2 emissions and passenger delays.

Arrival Management for Heathrow aims to reduce stack holding by up to two minutes for many flights. This is being achieved by slowing Heathrow arrivals down while in the cruise and descent phases. “It doesn’t sound like a lot, but two minutes if applied to all flights would be worth in excess of 5,000 tonnes of fuel a year, over 15,000 tonnes of CO2, and that's just at Heathrow,” says Andy Shand, NATS General Manager of Customer Affairs. “In time, as we see queue management techniques applied more widely, that benefit will increase.”

But DPI is not only a great way to improve efficiency now – it will also help future-proof the UK’s regional airports traffic management capacity. It could act as a building block for other technologies, such as the arrivals management capability, and systems for maximising runway use. In the longer term, the data can be made available more

widely. “DPI is about making the operation as efficient as possible,” says Shand. “The advantage of the Transport Systems Catapult is that it was able to act on behalf of lots of stakeholders, to bring together a group of airports to go through a project together, rather than doing it piecemeal. That is the strength of Transport Systems Catapult.”

AboveEfficiencies will result in significant carbon savings

INTRODUCING THE INFORMATION EXPLOITATION UNIT

The DPI project is led by the Transport Systems Catapult’s Information Exploitation business unit. This unit aims to develop enduring capabilities and relationships over the next five years to deliver benefits to customers and partners in the multimodal transport

space through optimal use of data, information and intelligence. It focuses on opening up and exploiting existing datasets to help the development of new applications, insights and capabilities that enable Intelligent Mobility. As well as working with

industry bodies and partners to create an environment that facilitates appropriate standards, guidance, policy and regulation, the unit instigates and drives the debate on the importance of suitable use of information in Intelligent Mobility and data-driven business.

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modelLING THE FUTURESOPHISTICATED MAPPING TOOLS AND NEW TECHNOLOGIES SUCH AS AUGMENTED REALITY COULD SOON TRANSFORM THE WAYS IN WHICH WE NAVIGATE OUR CITIES

You may have read all about it – the transport system is going through dramatic change. From driverless

pods and a seamless, modernised rail network, to an aviation sector so efficient that it will benefit the economy, environment and passenger waiting times, the future is promising. But for customers, operators and companies, it can be difficult to envisage how these modes would work, separately or together.

How will an autonomous vehicle react to people, and vice versa? If a Crossrail station closes because of large crowds, what are the pedestrianised options? How would a fleet of hybrid or electric buses in cities help reduce pollution? And should a greater number of pioneering companies such as Uber emerge, how would they affect traffic, or taxi firms?

“We’re answering those ‘what if?’ questions,” says Robin North, Principal Technologist at the Transport Systems Catapult. As a member of the nine-person strong Modelling and Visualisation technical capability team, North is focused on gauging risk and opportunities. Their priorities are to understand and communicate the performance of transport systems innovations before they are built or deployed, to target development and accelerate adoption.

“We are looking at innovations that change elements of a complex transport system, comprising infrastructure, vehicles and, most importantly, people and their relationships,” North continues. “It is very hard to predict what the effects will be without making use of a model of the system. It is even harder to

compare the merits of doing A or B, both, or neither. To make good decisions about investments and about development programmes for alternative technologies, we must support analysis of transport system performance.”

By using data from a range of sources, the team works with algorithm-based software tools to imagine various scenarios. Data could be gleaned from public open-data initiatives, local authorities sharing data or companies sharing information under a non-disclosure agreement. A ‘synthetic population’ is also needed, and this requires the merging of old and new data. Sources such as the census could be used alongside anonymised travel records to represent the UK population, their characteristics and preferences.

The synthetic group, which could be split into subgroups such as families, professionals or students, can then be put through various situations at the click of a button, anything from engaging with public transport networks during major sporting events to travelling by air shortly after a volcano erupts.

“We are enabling integration of transport models and datasets in ways that permit rapid testing and development of innovative approaches,” says North.

The Transport Systems Catapult also collects its own surveys, including mobile phone data, which is useful in assessing people’s habits and needs. And the team has invested in deploying »

OppositeEver more sophisticated route-planning software is transforming the travel experience

HEADER MODELLING & VISUALISATION

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SMALL, NIMBLE, DYNAMIC

Peter Lindgren, COO, TravelAI Ltd (a London-based software specialist):

“A nimble company with innovative technology and a bottom-up approach, TravelAi is an unusual match for the transport sector. It is an industry where the need to avoid risk and a regulatory landscape that limits competitive pressures have stymied innovation. Yet things are changing – and fast.

"TravelAi is typical of a new class of small, dynamic companies, using new technology and data techniques to add value across the transport chain. The Catapult provides a hub, helping large companies navigate the changing landscape and new entrants overcome hurdles to market. The Catapult has joined a consortium with TravelAi to create Catch!, a data service for cities and the transport industry. The journey planner provides routing based on live travel data and helps cities implement systems that better match citizens’ needs. The consortium includes cities, universities, SMEs and a global consultant. TravelAi’s smartphone software generates the data that underpins the solution by detecting each user’s route and mode of transport in real time. The Catapult will guide the cities’ understanding of the data’s value, informing the business model and identifying opportunities.”

air-quality sensors – AQMesh from Air Monitors/Geotech – to monitor pollution.

“We have also acquired industry-leading tools to model emissions from road vehicles, and are collaborating with university partners to implement models for aviation and maritime sectors,” says North. “These allow improvements in system efficiency, for example managing freight transfer from ships to trucks and on to distribution centres, to be assessed in terms of how they affect pollutant emissions and air quality.”

It’s clear that the customer, whether a commuter, weekender or someone delivering goods, would benefit from this research in terms of health, safety and service levels. But a priority for the team is also linking specialists to business.

“Technology innovators are not always transport specialists. Especially for SMEs, they don’t typically have the access or the means to model the whole transport system and assess the wider impacts and benefits

modelling and analytical tools and techniques is set to grow to £60bn from £15bn in 2014. The market size, comprising modelling, simulation and augmented reality, is some £125bn. The UK is an international leader and has a strong professional services industry. “Our work is about equipping that industry to remain world-leading,” says North.

One company benefiting in terms of increasing outreach and connecting to large-scale projects is Virtual Viewing. It is the enterprise behind the 360-degree virtual reality of Milton Keynes – complete with its own driverless pod – being presented at the Transport Systems Catapult Imagine Festival 2015.

“The Catapult gives us a chance to showcase our work to an audience we'd struggle to reach on our own,” says Stewart Bailey, its Managing Director. “Being chosen

as an event partner identifies us as a leader among peers. To be able to present to key influencers in the UK is beyond value.”

Bailey has also overcome practical challenges thanks to the collaboration.“The biggest challenge is in achieving fully immersive real-time visualisations, including ‘haptics’, where one is tactically connected with virtual environments.

“Without the Catapult being able to bring the Omnifinity system – a Swedish developer of solutions for natural movement in the virtual world – to the UK, we would not have had access to such technology. It allows our designers to strive towards the future, knowing that we have partners with us on that journey. As we push the boundaries of modelling and visualisation, the Catapult too is pushing the boundaries of hardware.”

£60bnBy 2020, the market for data, modelling and analytical tools and techniques is set to grow to £60bn from £15bn in 2014

£125bnThe market size, comprising modelling, simulation and augmented reality

THE CATAPULT GIVES US A CHANCE TO SHOWCASE OUR WORK TO AN AUDIENCE THAT WE WOULD STRUGGLE TO REACH ON OUR OWNMANAGING DIRECTOR, VIRTUAL VIEWING, STEWART BAILEY

of their innovation. This makes developing investable business cases more difficult,” says North. “We provide access to state-of-the-art simulation, analysis and visualisation capabilities to assist UK innovators in competing on the world stage.”

Some simulation technology can already be viewed and used at a lab at the Intelligent Mobility centre in Milton Keynes. More is on the way, and the Catapult is looking to work with the video-gaming industry to develop new ways to visualise the future.

“Gaming is an area we want to tap in to,” says North. “We are witnessing a switch in focus from building infrastructure with 50-year lifespans to evolving market-driven services and

INTRODUCING THE MODELLING AND VISUALISATION UNIT

The Modelling and Visualisation unit is the umbrella under which the team of skilled technologists, from strategists to engineers, work to deliver real change on the ground.

Multi-modal transport planning currently takes too long and often produces too much data of limited value. Linked to a market size of £125bn comprising modelling, simulation

and augmented reality, the team are making good use of the UK’s strong background in models, embracing techniques from other fields and conducting new research

pricing solutions that dictate a fundamental shift in our forecasting approach. Strategic planning will remain important, but with an increased tactical emphasis on operating existing systems more efficiently. Data mining and pattern recognition, coupled with gaming of alternative futures, are better suited for this.”

If all this sounds vaguely familiar, it should. Other companies and organisations develop and use modelling. During the London 2012 Olympics, for example, strategic highway modelling was used to forecast predicted impacts of traffic movements on London’s road network. The results were used to inform travel advice for the public and businesses, including diversion effects, delays and the impact of proposed road closures around venues.

The Catapult is unique is in its approach, identifying barriers that hold back the science’s true potential. High on its hit list is the “silo approach”, where key individuals, departments and organisations fail to share valuable information with each other, thus mitigating the potential of data modelling.

“This combination of tooling is new, as is the opportunity for high-grade modelling and visualisation to be used at an earlier stage in the development of an innovation,” North says. “The business models around providing support and access are also new, breaking down the barriers for smaller enterprises to gain access to cutting-edge facilities.”

By 2020, the market for data,

Opposite:The Transport Systems Catapult's data suite

MODELLING & VISUALISATION

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AIMES Grid Services Ltd

Alba Orbital Limited

AustriaTech

Avanti Communications Ltd

Cambridge Econometrics

Cell Therapy Catapult

Commonplace

Community Action MK

Digital Catapult

E-Car Club

Ertico

Evalu8

Experience Oxfordshire

Faxi

Fronesys

Future Cities Catapult

Graymatter

HourBike

Humber LEP

In Touch Limited

ITO World

LCP Consulting

Maynard

MDST Ltd

MIRA

Oxbotica

Oxford MRG

Pie Mapping

Placr Ltd

Playground Energy

Racelogic Ltd

RDM Group

Red Ninja

Red Web

Satellite Applications Catapult

Temple Group

Transport for Greater Manchester

Travel AI

Videregen

ZipAbout Ltd

THIS YEAR, THE TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT HAS COLLABORATED WITH 40 SMEs

For SMEs working in the Intelligent Mobility space, the Transport Systems Catapult is creating a new lifeline. To

bridge the gap between academia, big industry and SMEs, the Catapult develops a range of collaborative R&D programmes, while facilitating pilots and demonstrator projects that help small businesses showcase their work.

And, to ease problems around early-stage financing, it has launched a £50-£100m SME Fund. This will help develop pioneering technologies that transform the movement of goods and people. “We are on the cusp of a revolution in transport that will see IT innovations used to create hyper-efficient, seamless movement of goods and people based on real-time data,” says Paul Zanelli, Chief Technical Officer at the Catapult. “The UK has led the way in opening up transport data to drive this kind of innovation, from Transport for

London’s ‘open data’ powering over 200 travel apps, to the UK Government’s ‘open data portal’. This has spurred innovation across the private sector, giving Britain a major advantage in a future transport system fuelled by data.”

This year, the Catapult has partnered with 40 SMEs and engaged with 265. Among them is PIE Mapping, which is building the first real-time roadmap of Britain, pooling live data from highway agencies, transport operators and local authorities to build personalised route maps.

Scottish business Route Monkey has developed the world’s first electric-vehicle ‘scheduling and modelling’ system, which is helping BMW and TfL carry out virtual trials to predict the impact of electric cars across cities.

Mole Solutions, meanwhile, is trialling the world’s first automated freight pipelines that transport consignments through

tunnels on driverless capsules.Zipabout, a London-based

enterprise, has built technology that scours social media traffic and commuter movements to chart the mood of consumers across every location and even predict future transport events.

And Internet of Things pioneer Asset Mapping is trialling technology that captures live data from any connected device, allowing transport operators 24-hour visibility over entire networks from a single screen, in real-time.

“A perfect storm of circumstances, from the rise of taxi-pooling to the introduction of smart cards and declining car ownership among young city dwellers, is ushering in a new kind of shared transport delivered as an on-demand package service,” says Zanelli. “This will see chaos and congestion replaced with a single, responsive, harmonised system bound together by intelligent data.”

Championing small businessTHE TRANSPORT SYSTEMS CATAPULT IS GIVING SOME OF THE UK'S MOST PROMISING SMALL BUSINESSES A LEG-UP THROUGH COLLABORATION, PROMOTION, AND EARLY-STAGE FINANCE

Opposite:The Catapult has partnered with 40 SMEs on collaborative projects this year

SMES

32 / IMPACT

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Copyright © Transport Systems CatapultDesign and editorial: Touchline, touchline.com

will be invested in Intelligent Mobility in the

UK economy thanks to the work of the Catapult

In new funds available for residual value and innovation in rail

£359MILLION

The estimated worth of the

global market for Intelligent

Mobility is

£900BILLION

PER ANNUMBY 2025

Automated Transport Systems is linked to a

market size

£81BILLION

market size

£98BILLION

market size

£334BILLION

market size

£125BILLION

Information Exploitation is linked to a

Customer Service is linked to a

Modelling & Visualisation is linked to a

or 70% of the total global market for

Intelligent Mobility

Transport Systems Catapult’s four business units

directly address

£638BILLION

the air network will save

By improving real-time data accuracy by

104staff members

including technologists and innovators work at the Catapult

71%

£10 MILLION

£123MILLION

Transport Systems Catapult is collaborating with 137 organisations

including

40 SMES

75LARGEBUSINESSES

22ACADEMIC

INSTITUTIONS

124

3

Transportsystemscatapult

IN NUMBERS

people have visited the Catapult

4,397

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ts.catapult.org.uk