Yorkshire Post

City to pioneer traffic tracking

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR n Email: rob.parsons@jpress.co.uk n Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

TRANSPORT: Sensors tracking the movements of vehicles around a Yorkshire city will help make it the first in the UK “truly ready for the coming revolution” in the way urban transport is monitored and controlled.

City of York Council hopes its pioneering approach will allow it to tackle congestion and improve air quality.

SENSORS TRACKING the movements of vehicles around a Yorkshire city from this month will help make it the first in the UK that is “truly ready for the coming revolution” in the way urban transport is monitored and controlled.

City of York Council hopes its pioneering approach to gathering data about where and when vehicles are travelling will allow it to tackle congestion and improve air quality without the need for new roads and expensive physical infrastruc­ture.

The medieval city, whose constricte­d road layout is based on Viking origins, suffers congestion on many of its major roads and an average peak-time vehicle speed of below 20mph.

The need to build hundreds more homes in the city every year and major proposed developmen­ts such as the York Central and British Sugar schemes are likely to place more pressure on a road network that has little scope to expand.

As of April 2018, six sensor sites on the A59 towards Harrogate between the city centre and its boundary will extract data from vehicles and their drivers’ mobile phones for analysis by the council’s monitoring officers.

The data, which will be collected anonymousl­y, will be used to help make better decisions about traffic light patterns, to make the roads run more smoothly and speed up journey times. Decisions will be at first be taken by council officers but in the medium term this will be done automatica­lly.

It is expected that the A59 pilot scheme, known as EBORACUM, will be expanded across York, making the popular tourist destinatio­n the first city in the UK where vehicle movements are managed through the use of data.

And ultimately, the data harvested by the scheme will mean real-time informatio­n about traffic movements and car park availabili­ty can be passed back to a new generation of connected and ‘driverless’ vehicles.

Darren Capes, the city’s transport systems manager, said the work already being done in York was to “get the city to the forefront” in the way it interacts with these vehicles.

He said: “This is not science fiction.”

Peter Dew, the city’s executive member for transport, said: “Our famous historic city hasn’t got the space for more road, so we have to use technology as much as tarmac to get our network fit for the whole of the 21st century.

“What happens on York’s roads over the next couple of years will help to define how traffic is managed in the UK.

“This is a genuinely pioneering approach to making our roads safer and air cleaner, made possible by York’s digital infrastruc­ture.”

City of York Council has received nearly £3m in funding from the Government for its Smarter Transport Evolution Programme (STEP), which will allow it to gather data from across the city and mix it with informatio­n gathered by private operators.

According to a council report: “STEP is a programme of delivery – not research – that will drive York towards being the first city in the UK truly ready for the coming revolution in managing whole-city mobility, through new data and the gradual adoption of connected and autonomous vehicles, rather than traditiona­l traffic control using road infrastruc­ture.

“By applying technologi­es that are already in use in the UK in trials and deployment­s to a whole city, we will be able to maximise benefits and act as a beacon for other similar cities.”

£3M City of York Council has received nearly £3m in funding from the Government for its STEP programme.

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