The Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation (formerly the Institution of Highways and Transportation) is a learned society concerned specifically with the planning, design, construction, maintenance and operation of land-based transport systems and infrastructure.
With over 11,500 members, the CIHT offers routes to qualifications such as Chartered and Incorporated Engineer status and also Transport Planning Professional. The CIHT is dedicated to providing support and networking opportunities to members with a calendar of technical seminars and conferences, plus social events. The CIHT has 18 regional UK branches and several overseas branches that all run local events and technical meetings.
The CIHT is a board-governed professional body. The main aims of the Council and Boards are to act as the decision making bodies for the CIHT and deliver the strategy, business plans and outputs on behalf of the membership. The CIHT’s Council and Boards were established to deliver the object of the Institution:
The CIHT is a member of the Construction Industry Council.
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The Institution of Highways and Transportation was founded in 1930.[1]
To reflect its standing in the industry, the Institution decided to apply for Royal Charter status. In 2008 IHT submitted its Petition, draft Charter and ByeLaws to the Privy Council. At the Privy Council meeting held at Buckingham Palace on 15 October 2009 Her Majesty the Queen approved an Order instructing the Lord Chancellor to affix the Great Seal to the Institution's Charter.
As a result on 7 December 2009, the Institution was granted its Royal Charter and took its current name of the Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation.
The Transport Advice Portal (TAP) website is a joint venture involving the Department for Transport (DfT) and the CIHT. TAP has been devised to direct members of the transportation profession and the general public to core documents in a range of subject areas that focus on the management of user groups on roads in the UK. The portal acts as a repository of web links to documents that are seen as key guides to the planning, design and operation of road networks.
In July 2008 the IHT, as it then was, became a partner in the Campaign for Safe Road Design which is calling on the UK government to make safe road design a national transport priority.[2]