Mobilising data for the future of urban transport

It's not just gathering the data that's important, says Johan Herrlin - it's making sure that transport organisations share it with one another that will determine travellers' satisfaction. Data is transforming the way we move around cities, from family car journeys to the daily train commute. Gone are the days when travelling from A to B meant remembering your AA map and having to ask for directions at regular intervals. If you were trying to navigate London as a tourist a mere decade ago, it required
Classification & Data Collection / August 8, 2018
Citymapper-iphone-london.jpg
© Citymapper - Apps like Citymapper make London easily accessible for first-time visitors

It's not just gathering the data that's important, says Johan Herrlin - it's making sure that transport organisations share it with one another that will determine travellers' satisfaction

Data is transforming the way we move around cities, from family car journeys to the daily train commute. Gone are the days when travelling from A to B meant remembering your AA map and having to ask for directions at regular intervals. If you were trying to navigate London as a tourist a mere decade ago, it required interpreting an unfamiliar transport network in the UK’s largest city. You had to figure out all the various modes and timetables available to you before setting off, with dubious insight into how long the journey would actually take.

How far we’ve come in such a short time! Nowadays, that level of inconvenience seems almost unthinkable. There’s no need to blow the cobwebs off your travel map or wait hours for a bus to arrive. Transit data is being used by transport authorities, mapping platforms and third-party applications to help people navigate cities around the world, allowing them to get to their destination in the quickest and most convenient way possible. Apps like Citymapper make London easily accessible for first-time visitors to the capital; open data initiatives, such as the one by Uber Movement, provide traffic and mobility insights for urban planning; and traffic lights can now track late-running buses - so not only do you know down to the minute when your bus will arrive, data is helping make sure it’s not late in the first place.

All of the above is causing behaviour on the ground and travelling habits to change too. People are using more public transportation options they might not have felt comfortable navigating before, as more information about them becomes available. They’re also increasingly relying on shared and on-demand services, made viable because of data. We’re seeing a global emergence of bike- and ride-sharing schemes, mobility companies adopting predictive analytics and journey planning improvements. We’re smack dab in the middle of a transport revolution as data continues to evolve and companies learn how best to harness it, but what does the future of day-to-day urban transport hold?

A MaaS transition

Today’s hot topics in urban mobility are flying taxis and driverless cars, but the real revolution - the one that will most immediately change the way the everyday person travels - is happening on a smaller scale. For a long time, cars have been the primary method of transport, especially for those living outside of big urban centres. For someone living an hour away from the nearest city, where the only method of public transport is a bus service that operates on an hourly basis, the default method of transport is naturally by car.

But in the future, Mobility as a Service (MaaS) could be the answer instead. MaaS is the idea that we’re moving away from privately owned modes of transportation and towards consuming transportation solution as a service. This will mean integrating public and private transit providers across multiple modes of transportation, and providing a single-access interface or app for managing trips. So in the case of our car-owner described above, a ride-sharing service could drop them off at a train to take them into the city, where they could hop on a bike for the last leg of the journey. With the help of a MaaS platform to manage the trip, the whole thing would be seamless, and the traveller wouldn’t need any additional apps to pay for the various modes of transport taken either. MaaS could solve today’s issues of traffic and congestion by changing the way people and goods travel, but it can only truly be realised through access to high-quality, real-time transit data that seamlessly reflects the customer experience.

We are yet to see MaaS applied at scale to multiple cities in countries across the world, but we’re starting to see the concept in places. Some transport authorities have partnered with ride-hailing providers to target the ‘last mile’ problem in cities like London, while MaaS experiments with various private sector partners have happened on a trial basis in Gothenburg, Helsinki, and as of recently the West Midlands. In the meantime, while easy access to increasing transport options will change people’s behaviours, public transport services are at risk of being marginalised to non-profitable routes while private operators take the busy, popular thoroughfares - something we should seek to avoid. 

Share and share alike

Considering the wealth of data we have in existence from both private and public transit providers, we are in a position today to make MaaS a reality. However, sharing is definitely caring in this case. Open data is crucial to realising the concept on a wider scale.

Overall, a lack of sharing knowledge is a global issue, in the transport sector and out. There is still resistance from governments and organisations to share certain types of data with the public, and there is worry about the risks relating to costs, privacy and security that might come into play as a result. Some countries are more proactive about this than others. In the US, there’s a culture of transparency around taxpayer funds, meaning that if they are used to collect data, that data should be open to the public. Similarly, mobility service providers that receive public funding in Helsinki, Finland, must make their data open and accessible.

Inevitably, public and private mobility providers vary in their data-sharing incentives. For private providers who have invested significant resources in mining data to predict demands and set real-time pricing, there has been the fear of losing their main strategic asset.

Recently though, we are seeing a move towards more data openness in the transport sector specifically, as more and more providers realise that open data can have an overwhelmingly positive return on investment - especially in this sector, which has such inherently complicated systems. As mentioned above, Uber has decided to open up the anonymised data of its London trips. Earlier this year, a number of private transportation companies signed a ‘shared mobility pledge’ outlining a set of principles to make cities more liveable and sustainable as technology develops, one of which includes aiming for ‘public benefits via open data’.

Looking forward

The quality of the data is, of course, equally important. If the data used in a MaaS application doesn’t match with the real world, the entire premise falls apart. Ito World focuses on transforming operational data published by cities and authorities into high-quality, human-navigable information. In Great Britain alone, we make over 97,000 changes to data in order to deliver a product that is suited for our customers - who include some of the largest journey planning apps in the world - ensuring that what they deliver to the end user is the same as what the person sees at the bus stop, train station or bike-sharing dock. Stated another way, if a MaaS app used the available open data without modification, they would have over 97,000 opportunities to create a bad user experience with misleading data.

The tide is turning and the transport industry is increasingly savvy to the crucial need for accurate data. For the public to truly trust MaaS, they first need to feel confidence in public transport, and in their ability to choose the optimal mode and route at any given time from the information available to them. We’re already seeing the economic benefits of open data initiatives - agencies and operators are extending their reach, app developers are building products tailored to market demand and innovation is being driven, improving the industry as a whole. Let’s continue mobilising data to keep people moving - so we’re not left asking for directions when the bus pulls off.

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