Created by the Alliance for Parking
Data Standards (APDS) and
funded by the Department for Transport, the
standardised data could lead to smoother and easier
payment methods right across the country and could
transform the way we park as the Oyster card
transformed the way we travel in London.
The announcement follows the publication of the
government’s Future of
mobility: urban strategy, and is a world-first for
parking. By helping to streamline the parking
experience and making it easier for drivers to find a
suitable parking place, the standards could ultimately
free up crucial space, easing congested cities and
boosting British high streets.
Future of Mobility Minister, , said:
We are on the brink of a revolution for the future of
transport, with ground-breaking technologies creating
huge opportunities for cleaner, cheaper, safer and
more reliable journeys.
We now need to ensure the infrastructure surrounding
these technologies is in place and can accommodate
these innovations. The new parking data standards
will bring government, private organisations and
technologies together to ensure a smoother parking
experience for drivers.
Chair of the British Parking Association and Chair of
the APDS,
Nigel Williams, said:
The new standards will enable the next generation of
apps and connected cars to find a parking space, park
and pay - with little or no intervention from the
driver. The involvement of the British Parking
Association in APDShas
ensured that the UK is at the forefront of innovation
to improve the customer experience of parking.
Local Government Minister said:
Hunting for a parking space and then checking if you
have the right change to pay for it isn’t the best
start to any shopping experience, but it can be the
reality more often than not.
An intelligent parking system will not only make life
easier for commuters, but could also improve footfall
to our town centres – meaning both people and local
businesses benefit.
To support the introduction of the standards, 4
research and development projects in Manchester City
Council, Oxfordshire County Council, Cambridgeshire
County Council and across a consortium of South Essex
Councils will receive a share of £1 million to start
putting the APDS standards
into practice, with a further 7 projects being
commissioned to identify ways to open up local
authority data.
The development of the parking language will make it
easier for local authorities and private companies to
exchange data, ensuring cars of the future navigate
both driver and passengers to an available space based
on the price, quality of the space, safety of the space
and availability of on-site services — including being
near to electric chargepoints.
The announcement is another milestone for the
government’s Future of
Mobility Grand Challenge, which aims to tap into
the extraordinary innovation across the country in
order to improve everyday journeys.