Skip to main content

Good routes with QRoutes

England’s Kent County Council has improved its special-educational-needs transport services with computerised routing technology that optimises transport efficiency by up to 15%. Using cloud-based software from QRoutes, the council has reviewed 1,500 routes and re-planned transport for 4,000 special-educational-needs pupils, as well as 1,000 people entitled to social care transport. Kent has a greater number of special-educational-needs clients than any other council in the UK, amounting to a €28.3 milli
September 28, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
England’s Kent County Council has improved its special-educational-needs transport services with computerised routing technology that optimises transport efficiency by up to 15%.


Using cloud-based software from QRoutes, the council has reviewed 1,500 routes and re-planned transport for 4,000 special-educational-needs pupils, as well as 1,000 people entitled to social care transport.

Kent has a greater number of special-educational-needs clients than any other council in the UK, amounting to a €28.3 million annual budget. The transport service is run through flexible framework agreements with local bus and taxi operators. This negates the need for the council to own its own expensive fleet. But with 1,500 individual routes, QRoutes has enabled the council to plan and optimise the transport for every one of almost 5,000 clients, explained Shane Bushell, client transport manager for Kent. “It’s a task that would have been impossible with manual planning and we’ve achieved savings of up to 15%  through improved routing and vehicle use.”  

According to Kent, manually planning a route used to take the team of planners between two and three days. The QRoutes software performs the same task in a few minutes. Additionally, the computed results have proven to be better as the system can simultaneously handle variable factors such as stop times and other complexities affecting special needs, said Bushell.

Related Content

  • Bentley Systems is advancing construction software technology
    January 15, 2016
    Bentley Systems has unveiled a wealth of new construction software technologies that can help optimise the progression of road projects - Mike Woof writes A host of new tools and software developments from Bentley Systems will help designers and construction firms deliver projects more quickly and efficiently. Senior vice president for Bentley Systems is Bhupinder Singh and he explained, “Our users are using more software and more devices than ever before and they’re creating more data.” He said that
  • Telematics could be an area for John Deere and Wirtgen resource sharing
    April 20, 2018
    The gods were smiling on the Wirtgen Group for the company’s Road Technology Days 2018 event. This year it was held in summer-like weather at the recently expanded Voegele plant near Mannheim in Germany. Within days the season dramatically changed from dreary chilly late winter to high temperatures, just in time to bathe the amassed demonstration equipment and the 4,000 guests in summer sunshine. But there won’t be any such dramatic changes within the Wirtgen Group, according to Domenic Ruccolo. After 28
  • A European Deere?
    July 4, 2018
    Iconic US manufacturer John Deere is back in Europe, thanks to its purchase of Wirtgen. David Arminas looks at what’s in store The gods were smiling on the Wirtgen Group for the company’s Road Technology Days 2018 event. This year it was held in summer-like weather at the recently expanded Voegele plant near Mannheim in Germany. Within days in northern Europe the season dramatically changed from dreary chilly late winter to glorious high temperatures, just in time to bathe the amassed demonstration equi
  • From managed asset to service provider: the future highway
    May 20, 2019
    Every day we hear about Mobility as a Service (MaaS), but what about Roads as a Service? Geoff Hadwick reports from the ERF in Brussels The familiar physical asset called the road will increasingly be seen as part of an emerging global services sector. Given that, the role of the road is changing, notes Christophe Nicodème, general director of the European Union Road Federation (ERF). We need to think much more carefully about planning highway infrastructure in terms of people’s needs, said Nicodème,