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Sivu About the Academy

Sivu Course topics

Mobility Academy courses cover a wide range of sustainable mobility topics. Courses are designed to provide insight into specific aspects of each topic area and to encourage discussion and exchange of experience and knowledge on the topic's real-world applicability.

Sivu Projects
Our courses are developed and offered in the context of international research and innovation projects on sustainable development in cities and regions in Europe and worldwide. They generally include examples from cities that have started implementing these new ideas and are intended to share the knowledge and insights gained with other cities and organisations in Europe and around the world.
Sivu Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning


Since the introduction of the SUMP concept by the European Commission in 2009, and the publication of the SUMP guidelines first edition in 2013, hundreds of cities across Europe engaged to make urban mobility cleaner and more sustainable. Comprehensive sustainable urban mobility planning has proven to be an effective way to tackle the climate, energy and environmental challenges that cities face in relation to transport. With a revised edition of the guidelines published in 2019, every town and city, irrespective of its size, can develop a high-quality Sustainable Urban Mobility Plan to help tackle the principal urban mobility challenges, and to improve quality of life for its citizens.


Sivu Public Transport


Public transport, as the backbone for sustainable transport, is a broad and complex field, including issues ranging from modes of ticket purchase and passenger information to safety and security and provision of service for vulnerable citizens to the introduction of alternative fuels and electrification to the development of a metropolitan public transport authority (allowing for the purchase of a single tickets for use on multiple services) to the use of market research to improve public transport services.

Sivu Data and mobility


Data is playing a larger and larger role in urban mobility. Intelligent transport systems (ITS) allow a city to digitally link and share data from one sub-system with another to improve the efficiency of the overall system. Data – and data sharing – also play an important role in the development of shared mobility and Mobility as a Service. Data-based planning is an increasingly important competence for cities to be able to dynamically react to shifting mobility patterns and make informed decisions about future mobility needs. Consistent data collection also allows a city to track its progress towards the achievement of its sustainable mobility (and other) goals.

Sivu Active Mobility


Active mobility covers walking and cycling as well as other human-powered modes (scooters, skateboards, etc.) as modes of urban – or in some cases even inter-urban – transportation. These must be considered on the same level as motorised modes of transport for their ability to move people and goods.

Sivu Freight and Urban Logistics


Fast and reliable delivery of goods must be assured to keep our urban centres vital. At the same time, delivery vehicles are a significant cause of urban air pollution and congestion; many are also over-dimensioned for the actual delivery need. Due to the increase in online shopping, delivery vehicles can now also often be seen in residential streets – bringing transport-related impacts as well as impacts on quality of life more generally.

Sivu Electric Mobility


Electric mobility has been a topic of discussion for many years, but its wide-scale implementation still presents a range of challenges. Regulatory, legal and policy aspects need to be addressed in order to make the use of electric vehicles more convenient, affordable and user-friendly as compared to conventionally-fuelled ones. In what cases is electrification best deployed? What problems can it help to solve (and which does it not)? How can existing infrastructure be exploited more efficiently to expand the network of charging stations and how can we ensure the clean provision of energy that will be needed to charge large electric fleet?

Sivu Networks


Transport networks exist on different geographical scales. On a large scale the Trans-European Network-Transport (TEN-T) and the national network and on a small scale the regional and local transport network need to be planned and managed. Different topics come into play such as interaction of planning institutions and stakeholders as well as data requirements to understand journey needs.

Sivu Cursos en Español


Desde que comenzamos a colaborar con el programa Euroclima+ para apoyar ciudades en América Latina en el proceso de desarrollo de implementación de sus Planes de Movilidad Urbana Sostenible (PMUS), hemos elaborado e implementado diversas oportunidades de aprendizaje, una de ellas son los cursos en español que se presentan en esta sección. Estos cursos brindan conocimientos clave, ejemplos, buenas prácticas, herramientas, entre otros para reforzar el conocimiento sobre SUMPs en autoridades locales en la región latinoamericana. 



Sivu Cooperation



Cooperation cuts across almost all areas of sustainable urban mobility planning and implementation. It can entail working across departments, across jurisdictions, across sectors or across political lines. Many new mobility services require collaboration between the public and the private sectors. Cooperation also plays a significant role in co-creation processes, where participants work together to develop a plan that meets their own needs without infringing on those of others.
Sivu Urban vehicle access regulations
Sivu Test

test


Public transport, as the backbone for sustainable transport, is a broad and complex field, including issues ranging from modes of ticket purchase and passenger information to safety and security and provision of service for vulnerable citizens to the introduction of alternative fuels and electrification to the development of a metropolitan public transport authority (allowing for the purchase of a single tickets for use on multiple services) to the use of market research to improve public transport services.