The aim is to consolidate public transport systems, taxis, e-scooters and mobility providers into one planner and enable citizens to pay for the ride in one app.
The Estonian capital of Tallinn and the country’s second largest city of Tartu have signed a contract for the development of a mobility-as-a-service platform.
The aim is to consolidate the systems of public transport, taxis, electric scooters, and other mobility service providers in Tallinn and Tartu into a single travel planner and enable citizens also to pay for the ride in the same place with a single payment.
The app will be developed by the Latvian start-up mobility.delivered, mobile payment provider, Mobilly and geographic information systems, Jāņa Sēta.
“Our aim is to create a platform, which would help people combine different ways of transport, making it easier for people to move about the cities,” said Tallinn deputy mayor, Tanel Kiik. “In order to do so, different service providers must work together. In addition to buses, trolleybuses, trams and trains the app must include taxis and electric scooters as well.”
“We are confident that the residents and visitors of Tallinn and Tartu will appreciate our joint efforts to provide sustainable and convenient daily transport in one solution”
According to Tartu deputy mayor Raimond Tamm, diverse mobility services and their active use are of great importance to Tartu. He added: “This will help achieve our ambitious environmental goals. In the future, the application in question will allow both residents of Tartu and our guests to easily plan their movements, make choices between different modes of travel, and conveniently pay for all services used with a single payment.
“I am very happy that we have teamed up with Tallinn and that an innovative and necessary application will be introduced in the two largest cities of Estonia at the same time.”
“Combining different modes of transport into a unified system is very exciting,” said head of mobility.delivered, Jānis Meirans. “Our end goal is to make it easier for people to travel and move about cities.
“We are confident that the residents and visitors of Tallinn and Tartu will appreciate our joint efforts to provide sustainable and convenient daily transport in one solution.”
The budget for the project is €120 000. Half of the budget will be covered by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the other half will be provided by the cities of Tallinn and Tartu. Tallinn’s share of funding is one third and Tartu’s one sixth.
The development of the joint mobility platform is co-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).
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How will the platform integrate different transport modes into one planner?What payment methods will the app support for seamless user transactions?How does the platform contribute to achieving environmental sustainability goals?What role do mobility service providers play in the platform’s development?How will the app improve daily travel convenience for Tallinn and Tartu residents?