Do you know what modern traffic engineering is about?

It’s about being able to simulate and measure how changes in traffic will affect the city before you invest money and the trust of people.

Support your decisions with data

Thanks to surveys and analyses, you will design infrastructure that lasts more than one election term.

Planning a road that should improve traffic?

Infrastructure investments are expensive and citizens love to criticize every mistake. Make sure someone’s idea makes sense from a long-term perspective before you start building the road.

Is parking an eternal problem for you?

Find out where spaces are truly missing and where just adjusting the rules would be enough. Using data, you’ll set up the system so that both residents and visitors have somewhere to park.

Want to motivate people toward eco-friendly driving?

Then you need to create the space for it. We’ll show you where to build bike lanes, where to strengthen public transport, and where to widen sidewalks while maintaining traffic flow.

We’ll show you how to plan traffic so that it works

Today. Tomorrow. And in 20 years.

Conduct a survey of your city

You’ll be surprised by the results that traffic monitoring brings.

You’ll get a strategic development plan for years ahead

You invest only where it makes long-term sense

You make decisions based on precise data, not feelings

Proven in the field by these locations

What interests you most about traffic engineering

How long does it take to prepare a traffic analysis?

Traffic surveys and traffic capacity assessments can be completed in a few days to weeks; strategic mobility plans take 6–12 months. It depends on the size of the city and the scope of data we need to collect. We always define a time schedule and price at the beginning.

Will we understand the outputs?

All analyses and plans are prepared so that they are understandable to council members and the public. We use maps, charts, and visualizations that you can understand without a dictionary.

Can we start with a small survey and gradually expand it?

Yes, in some cases it is possible to start with just one street, intersection, or zone where a problem occurs. However, it is often necessary to obtain data from the entire city or a wider area in order to propose the best solution.

Schedule a no-obligation consultation

Find out how strategic mobility and cost planning will help your city grow sustainably.