
Cambridge City Council
Cambridge City Council
8 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2010 - 2013Partners:Cambridge City Council, Cambridge City Council, CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCILCambridge City Council,Cambridge City Council,CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCILFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: 972008Funder Contribution: 150,000 GBPAt the outset our aim was to analyse the technical feasibility and economic viability of reducing carbon dioxide emissions from post war semi-detached houses, built from BISF (British Iron and Steel Federation) construction, by 80%. We developed a whole house solution that exceeded the competition energy and CO2 emission performance targets. We used the skills of the expert consultants and contractor in our team, whilst engaging with the dwelling tenants and suppliers of innovative construction materials and technologies to develop a solution that is appropriate for this type of house and replicable around the UK. Some of the systems used included: solar photovoltaic and thermal panels; insulated external render and dry-lining; triple-glazing; LED lighting and flue gas heat recovery. We recognised that the majority of homes that need retrofitting around the country will be occupied during the process, so did not rely on relocating the tenants during the works
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2009Partners:National Physical Laboratory, Hampshire County Council, Thales Group, SERCO, ITIS Holdings plc +51 partnersNational Physical Laboratory,Hampshire County Council,Thales Group,SERCO,ITIS Holdings plc,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,LogicaCMG,Atkins UK,Arup Acoustics,Owlstone Limited,Logica Plc,Abington Partners,Serco (United Kingdom),Imperial College London,SERCO,PTV System Software und Consulting GmbH,IBM (United Kingdom),Thales Group,Transport for London Bus Priority Unit,SOLARTECH LTD,Atkins Design Environment & Engineering,TfL,Owlstone Limited,Nokia (Finland),TfL,INRIX (United Kingdom),IBM (United Kingdom),Owlstone Limited,Nokia Research Centre,Cambridge City Council,IBM (United Kingdom),ScienceScope (United Kingdom),Atkins UK,Logica Plc,SOLARTECH LTD,Abington Partners,Arup Group Ltd,NPL,NPL,Leicester Partnership,Cambridge City Council,Highways Agency,Hampshire County Council,ITIS Holdings plc,Highways Agency,Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust,PTV Group (Germany),Leicester Partnership,Serco (United Kingdom),Thales Research Ltd,Nokia Research Centre,PTV System Software und Consulting GmbH,Boeing,Cambridge City Council,Boeing (United States),Arup Group LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E002102/1Funder Contribution: 1,457,690 GBPThe impact of road traffic on local air quality is a major public policy concern and has stimulated a substantial body of research aimed at improving underlying vehicle and traffic management technologies and informing public policy action. Recent work has begun to exploit the capability of a variety of vehicle-based, person-based and infrastructure-based sensor systems to collect real time data on important aspects of driver and traffic behaviour, vehicle emissions, pollutant dispersion, concentration and human exposure. The variety, pervasiveness and scale of these sensor data will increase significantly in the future as a result of technological developments that will enable sensors to become cheaper, smaller and lower in power consumption. This will open up enormous opportunities to improve our understanding of urban air pollution and hence improve urban air quality. However, handing the vast quantities of real time data that will be generated by these sensors will be a formidable task and will require the application of advanced forms computing, communication and positioning technologies and the development of ways of combining and interpreting many different forms of data. Technologies developed in EPSRC's e-Science research programme offer many of the tools necessary to meet these challenges. The aim of the PMESG project is to take these tools and by extending them where necessary in appropriate ways develop and demonstrate practical applications of e-Science technologies to enable researchers and practitioners to coherently combine data from disparate environmental sensors and to develop models that could lead to improved urban air quality. The PMESG project is led by Imperial College London, and comprises a consortium of partners drawn from the Universities of Cambridge, Southampton, Newcastle and Leeds who will work closely with one another and with a number of major industrial partners and local authorities. Real applications will be carried out in London, Cambridge, Gateshead and Leicester which will build on the Universities' existing collaborative arrangements with the relevant local authorities in each site and will draw on substantial existing data resources, sensor networks and ongoing EPSRC and industrially funded research activities. These applications will address important problems that to date have been difficult or impossible for scientists and engineers working is this area of approach, due to a lack or relevant data. These problems are of three main types; (i) measuring human exposure to pollutants, (ii) the validation of various detailed models of traffic behaviour and pollutant emission and dispersion and (iii) the development of transport network management and control strategies that take account not just of traffic but also air quality impacts. The various case studies will look at different aspects of these questions and use a variety of different types of sensor systems to do so. In particular, the existing sensor networks in each city will be enhanced by the selective deployment of a number of new sensor types (both roadside and on-vehicle/person) to increase the diversity of sensor inputs. The e-Science technologies will be highly general in nature meaning that will have applications not only in transport and air quality management but also in many other fields that generate large volume of real time location-specific sensor data.Each institution participating in this project will be submitting their resource summary individually to Je-s. The resources listed within this Je-S Proposal are solely those of Imperial College with other institutions submitting their costs seperately, with one case for support.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2009 - 2009Partners:Cambridge City Council, CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCIL, Cambridge City CouncilCambridge City Council,CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCIL,Cambridge City CouncilFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: 971019Funder Contribution: 15,450 GBPThe public description for this project has been requested but has not yet been received.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2009Partners:SOLARTECH LTD, Atkins Design Environment & Engineering, Owlstone Limited, Nokia Research Centre, Cambridge City Council +52 partnersSOLARTECH LTD,Atkins Design Environment & Engineering,Owlstone Limited,Nokia Research Centre,Cambridge City Council,IBM (United Kingdom),ScienceScope (United Kingdom),Newcastle University,NPL,NPL,Atkins UK,Leicester Partnership,Cambridge City Council,Thales Group,SERCO,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,Newcastle University,SERCO,Thales Research Ltd,ITIS Holdings plc,Atkins UK,Arup Acoustics,PTV System Software und Consulting GmbH,Vassar College,Nokia Research Centre,IBM (United Kingdom),National Physical Laboratory,Abington Partners,TfL,Serco (United Kingdom),Vassar College,Owlstone Limited,Highways Agency,Thales Group,Hampshire County Council,SOLARTECH LTD,Hampshire County Council,ITIS Holdings plc,Owlstone Limited,Transport for London Bus Priority Unit,Highways Agency,Vassar College,Nokia (Finland),TfL,INRIX (United Kingdom),IBM (United Kingdom),PTV System Software und Consulting GmbH,Boeing,Cambridge City Council,Boeing (United States),Arup Group Ltd,Abington Partners,Arup Group Ltd,Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust,PTV Group (Germany),Leicester Partnership,Serco (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E002129/1Funder Contribution: 861,163 GBPThe impact of road traffic on local air quality is a major public policy concern and has stimulated a substantial body of researchaimed at improving underlying vehicle and traffic management technologies and informing public policy action. Recent work hassought to use a variety of vehicle-based, person-based and infrastructure-based sensor systems to collect data on key aspects ofdriver and traffic behaviour, emissions, pollutant concentrations and exposure. The variety and pervasiveness of the sensor inputsavailable will increase significantly in the future as a result both of the increasingly widespread penetration of existingtechnologies (e.g., GPS based vehicle tracking, CANbus interfaces to on-board engine management system data) within thevehicle parc and the introduction of new technologies (such as e.g., UV sensing and nanotechnology based micro sensors). Aparticularly exciting direction for future development will be in the use of vehicles as platforms for outward facing environmentalsensor systems, allowing vehicles to operate as mobile environmental probes, providing radically improved capability for thedetection and monitoring of environmental pollutants and hazardous materials.However, these developments present new and formidable research challenges arising from the need to transmit,integrate, model and interpret vast quantities of highly diverse (spatially and temporally varying) sensor data. Our approach in thisproject is to address these challenges by novel combination and extension of state-of-the-art eScience, sensor, positioning andmodelling (data fusion, traffic, transport, emissions, dispersion) technologies. By so doing, we aim to develop the capability tomeasure, model and predict a wide range of environmental pollutants and hazards (both transport related and otherwise) using agrid of pervasive roadside and vehicle-mounted sensors. This work will be at the leading edge of eScience, stretching thecapabilities of the grid in a number of aspects of the processing of massive volumes of sensor data.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2009Partners:Thales Group, NPL, Transport for London Bus Priority Unit, SERCO, Atkins UK +53 partnersThales Group,NPL,Transport for London Bus Priority Unit,SERCO,Atkins UK,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,NPL,National Physical Laboratory,PTV System Software und Consulting GmbH,Owlstone Limited,Nokia Research Centre,Owlstone Limited,Atkins UK,University of Southampton,Cambridge City Council,Arup Acoustics,IBM (United Kingdom),Thales Research Ltd,[no title available],Leicester Partnership,IBM (United Kingdom),Vassar College,Cambridge City Council,ScienceScope (United Kingdom),Thales Group,SOLARTECH LTD,Nokia Research Centre,University of Southampton,SERCO,Atkins Design Environment & Engineering,TfL,Vassar College,ITIS Holdings plc,Nokia (Finland),Highways Agency,Owlstone Limited,TfL,Hampshire County Council,ITIS Holdings plc,INRIX (United Kingdom),Abington Partners,IBM (United Kingdom),Highways Agency,Arup Group Ltd,Vassar College,Abington Partners,Serco (United Kingdom),SOLARTECH LTD,Hampshire County Council,PTV Group (Germany),Leicester Partnership,Serco (United Kingdom),Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust,PTV System Software und Consulting GmbH,Boeing,Cambridge City Council,Boeing (United States),Arup Group LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E00198X/1Funder Contribution: 321,463 GBPThis project is part of a collaborative eScience pilot project.Please see the corresponding application from Imperial College for the summary of the project
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