OPTIMISE EVERYONE’S TRAVEL, TODAY AND TOMORROW

Thinking multimodality and regional planning in an integrated way is at the heart of sustainable development and current societal concerns.

Whether in large urban centres or in sparsely populated regions, the transition towards a sustainable development model must be organised, and operational responses must be found that meet the current challenges of resilience, sustainability, decarbonisation and economic development.

THEY HAVE CONFIDENCE IN US

The projects we lead are always the fruit of close collaboration between our teams, our clients and our partners. And it is they who speak most highly of them.

SYSTRA was a special partner in the development of a sustainable urban mobility plan (SUMP) for Douala- a project financed by the AFD. Availability, listening and sharing, scientific objectivity, humility and understanding enabled SYSTRA to provide the Urban Community of Douala with a credible, realistic, inclusive and innovative SUMP. Prisca MBIMI OLINGA, SUMP project manager, Douala Urban Community
Jean YANGO, SUMP coordinator, Douala Urban Community

PLAN TODAY FOR TOMORROW’S TRAVEL

Our objective: to support our clients in defining their mobility projects and policies, but also to plan, size and optimise their networks in order to meet the demand of citizens. We provide assistance to the project owner or project manager in order to plan your short-, medium- and long-term mobility offers and participate in their implementation. Our clients may be, for example, organising authorities (public transport networks, port logistics, etc.), financers of infrastructure projects, etc.

At SYSTRA, this calls on a wide range of skills, specialising in strategic consultancy and regional planning, enabling us to deliver socioeconomic or land valuation studies, profitability projections, traffic forecasts, user surveys, travel flow modelling, etc. And this with a constant concern for environmental preservation.

The 1,000 consultants in SYSTRA’s Consultancy network constantly share their expertise and experience in order to stay at the cutting edge of technology and trends.

This global network is mobilised for any transport network project, wherever it is located in the world.

DID YOU KNOW?

In 2017, we worked on modelling visitor flows to better guide visitors in the world’s largest museum, the Louvre, in Paris.

MaaS: rethinking mobility

The idea of considering mobility “as a service” reflects the wider trend of the servicisation of industries, driven by the increasing digitalisation of activities. MaaS projects strive for broad, fair and simplified access to transport services for all local authorities, especially where public transport is still inadequate or unsuitable, while reducing congestion and emissions in high-density urban areas. At SYSTRA, we believe that the success of these projects depends more on their organisational and cultural dimension than on their technological dimension, to which MaaS is often reduced.

MULTIMODALITY, THE KEY TO EFFICIENT MOBILITY IN THE LONG-TERM

Making multimodality possible means first of all preparing for it by assessing needs, the potential use of the different modes, economic profitability and accessibility to new services. Feasibility studies, particularly for stations or hubs with a multimodal vocation, enable us to integrate all the mobility offers envisaged and available nearby andto aggregate them into a single space. All modes of travel, whether individual, collective or shared (free floating) are taken into account. In parallel, these studies highlight the possibilities for improving ticketing, passenger information and the energy bills of the public places concerned.

MOBILITY, AN ISSUE AT THE HEART OF SUSTAINABLE CITY PROJECTS

Our cities are changing along with our lifestyles and activities. Choices in terms of urban development and mobility are closely linked. Questions of distance, proximity and intermodality are at the heart of our considerations about the city, which must reconcile environmental concerns with an improved user experience.

More than ever, we need to design sustainable and resilient modes of transport, to be better prepared for crises and to cope with uncertainty. Inclusive modes of transport. Modes of transport that make the best use of technology: connected infrastructure, simplified ticketing and energy efficiency.

The future of mobility must be part of a systemic approach, mixing and interconnecting all modes of transport (collective, on-demand, individual, etc.) in order to ultimately provide responses adapted to users’ expectations.