Celebrating Innovations from Our R&D Teams
Celebrating Innovations from Our R&D Teams
We are uniquely positioned to invest in cutting-edge research and development (R&D) and our engineers and planners are rapidly addressing the changing needs of our clients. Currently, we have 15 cross-disciplinary R&D teams. Their important efforts are routinely celebrated internally, spotlighting the talented minds behind them.
Here we’re sharing six 30-second examples to give you a flavor of what’s going on and what we’re seeing across the firm. If you’re interested, connect with our contributors for deeper insights.
Transit Speed & Reliability
Email Jeremiah LaRose to Learn More
Email John Gard to Learn More
Email Cullen McCormick to Learn More
Email Yoyo Zeng to Learn More
Email Chelsea Richer to Learn More
Email Matt Haynes to Learn More
Looking for more insights?
share this article
Contributors
Jeremiah LaRose
Transit Discipline Leader
Email Me
John Gard
Parking, Land Use and Transportation Leader
Email Me
Cullen McCormick
Creative Studio Leader
Email Me
Yoyo Zeng
Senior Planning and Forecasting Discipline Member
Email Me
Chelsea Richer
Climate & Resilience Discipline Leader
Email Me
Matt Haynes
FP Think Innovative Leader
Email Me
Explore More
Bike & Bus Interaction on Our Streets
Bus operators and people on bikes often share road space, travel at similar speeds, and have very different sizes, making moving easily and safely an ongoing challenge. We recently partnered with LA Metro on a comprehensive review of bike/bus interactions in LA County, and together, developed a set of design and education recommendations that can help and may be applied anywhere in the United States. Take a look!
Recalibrating Our MXD Tool for Mixed-Use Trip Generation
This white paper outlines how our MXD modeling tool was recalibrated and validated with recent travel data and conditions.
Cincinnati Strategic Transit Study
Check out the study to better understand how demand-responsive transportation services (ride-hailing, flexible transit) currently fit into the Cincinnati transportation system and their potential role to complement fixed-route transit services.









