Transportation in cities, with its related environmental and social concerns continues to be a topic of the utmost priority for urban authorities and central governments around the world. Frequently, the concern is not orderly but driven by the safety crises which take place regularly and even the best planned urban transport systems require considerable studies to safeguard their safety, maintenance and operational use.
On a broader front, the continuing need for better urban transport systems in general and the need for a healthier environment has led to an increased level of research around the world. This is reflected in the proceedings of this well-established meeting, which stresses the continuous steady growth and research into the urban transport systems control aspects, information and simulation systems. All these topics continue to be of importance for analysing the complex inter-relation of the urban transport environment and for establishing action strategies for transport and traffic problems.
The conference series has always attracted a wide international spread of delegates and is now well established as the premier annual event of its type. It first started in Southampton (1995); continuing in Barcelona (1996); Acquasparta, Italy (1997); Lisbon (1998); Rhodes (1999); Cambridge, UK (2000); Lemnos, Greece (2001); Seville (2002); Crete (2003); Dresden (2004), Algarve (2005) and Prague (2006).
WHO SHOULD ATTEND
The Conference will be of interest to engineers, scientists and managers working in industry, universities, research organisations and government; involved in the planning and management of urban transportation systems and transport policy.
BENEFITS OF ATTENDING
Keep up-to-date on the latest advances in the field.
Present your research within a unique forum.
Collaborate with experts from around the world.
Your conference paper will be reviewed by members of the Committee and other colleagues and rapidly processed for prompt publication in book form.
In addition, all papers in the conference book will be permanently archived in the Transactions of the Wessex Institute on our eLibrary site, where they will be available to the international scientific community.