IGPDecaux wins Rome’s iconic bus shelter contract in Italy

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JCDecaux
JCDecaux

IGPDecaux wins Rome’s iconic bus shelter contract in Italy

Paris, December 6th, 2024 - JCDecaux SE (Euronext Paris: DEC), the number one outdoor advertising company worldwide, announced that IGPDecaux has been awarded the bus shelter contract in Rome (2.8 million inhabitants and 50 million tourists in 2023). IGPDecaux is a company owned 60% by JCDecaux SE and 40% by the du Chène de Vère family.

Following a competitive tender and awarded by ATAC, the city’s public transport company, the 11-year contract covers the upgrade of 9,600 existing infrastructures (including 1,400 bus shelters and 8,200 bus stops) as well as the installation and maintenance of bus stops and bus shelters from the new “Eterna” range, providing a total of more than 1,900 advertising panels on bus shelters, including 747 digital ones.

The installation programme started on December 6th, meeting the objective that some of the new street furniture will be in place for the inauguration of the 2025 Jubilee. Included in the “Piano Fermate” project, the contract is part of detailed plans by “Roma Capitale” to enhance the use of public transport services, modernise the urban environment and introduce innovative services for Rome’s citizens, city users, as well as the millions of visitors who come to the capital.

This contract is based on a hybrid model where Capex will be financed by a public subsidy and through advertising.

In addition to the refurbishment of the existing infrastructure, the contract includes the installation of new street furniture, improving the quality of urban life, for public transport passengers and visitors. This comprises:

  • 435 “Eterna” bus shelters equipped with 501 digital touch screens for user information, and an innovative system to aid visually impaired users,

  • 405 electronic “Eterna” bus stops with a digital panel that includes an audio system to aid visually impaired users,

  • 14 “Eterna” bus terminals with an office and toilets for the exclusive use of ATAC staff.

The introduction of a new application for navigation and accessibility for the visually impaired will make Rome the first Italian city to have this service available free of charge to the city.

The new street furniture benefits from a unified design across all products, while also being easily recognisable by passengers and fitting seamlessly into the urban landscape. The new “Eterna” line of street furniture was designed, developed and produced by JCDecaux specifically for Rome, and was chosen to give the public transport provided by ATAC a future-facing and streamlined image, thanks to an exclusive, light and well-integrated design that enhances the city environment.