Both Prosperity (2016-2019) and SUNRISE (2017-2021) directly address SUMP development, promotion, and implementation support across European cities.
MOBILISSIMUS KORLATOLT FELELOSSEGUTARSASAG
Budapest mobility consultancy specialising in Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans and urban transport implementation across European cities.
Their core work
Mobilissimus is a Budapest-based mobility consultancy specialising in sustainable urban transport planning, with hands-on experience implementing Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans (SUMPs) in Central and Eastern European cities. Their work sits at the intersection of transport policy, urban planning, and citizen engagement — translating research frameworks into practical city-level action. In EU projects they contribute local implementation knowledge, stakeholder engagement in Hungarian and regional urban contexts, and on-the-ground piloting capacity. Their name itself signals their core identity: mobility is their primary business, not a side research activity.
What they specialise in
Prosperity focused on innovation and promotion of SUMPs while SUNRISE targeted research and implementation support in sustainable urban neighbourhoods, both requiring deep transport policy expertise.
As an SME participant in large RIA consortia, Mobilissimus most likely contributes city-level or national-level piloting and dissemination rather than pure research.
Based in Budapest, Hungary, their regional positioning adds CEE urban context to otherwise Western-European-dominated research consortia in both projects.
How they've shifted over time
Both of Mobilissimus's H2020 projects were initiated within a single 12-month window (2016–2017) and share the same thematic territory — sustainable urban mobility and neighbourhood-level transport planning — making it impossible to identify a meaningful thematic shift from early to recent work. Their entire documented EU research engagement is a coherent, focused commitment to one domain rather than an evolution across it. The absence of keywords and the short participation timeline suggest this organisation used H2020 as an entry point into European research networks rather than a long-running R&D programme, and their trajectory beyond 2021 is not visible from this data alone.
Their two overlapping projects represent a consistent deepening of urban sustainability expertise — from mobility plans to full neighbourhood-level integration — suggesting they are building toward a comprehensive urban transition consultancy profile rather than diversifying away from transport.
How they like to work
Mobilissimus joins consortia as a participant, never as coordinator, which points to a specialist contributor role where they bring local implementation capacity rather than project leadership. The sheer scale of their network — 41 distinct partners across 19 countries from just 2 projects — reflects involvement in large, multi-city RIA consortia typical of EU transport research, where each partner covers a geographic or functional niche. This tells potential collaborators they are experienced in large-consortium dynamics and comfortable operating as one voice among many, but should not be expected to lead or manage project administration.
Despite only two projects, Mobilissimus has touched 41 unique partners across 19 countries — a broad European reach earned through participation in large, geographically distributed transport consortia. Their network likely spans city authorities, transport agencies, and research institutes across Western and Central Europe.
What sets them apart
Mobilissimus occupies a rare niche as a Hungarian SME with verified experience in EU-scale sustainable urban mobility research — a profile that is valuable to consortia that need CEE urban representation without having to recruit a large academic institution. Their small size and private company status means they can move faster and engage more directly with city clients than university partners. For consortium builders targeting geographic diversity and practical implementation capacity in Central Europe, Mobilissimus fills a role that is structurally hard to replace.
Highlights from their portfolio
- ProsperityThe larger of their two projects (EUR 129,147) and the earlier entry point into H2020, focused directly on promoting Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans — the flagship EU policy instrument for urban transport, making this their most policy-relevant contribution.
- SUNRISERan the longest of their two engagements (through 2021) and addressed the broader challenge of sustainable urban neighbourhoods, extending their mobility expertise into integrated urban development — a thematic expansion that signals growing scope.