Skip to main content

Q-Free expands technology offering with acquisition of TCS

Norwegian-headquartered tolling specialist Q-Free is to acquire 100 per cent of the shares of TCS International (TCS). Established more than ten years ago, TCS has fifteen employees, with offices in Boston, US, and a subsidiary in Toronto, Canada. The company provides advanced transportation management systems (ATMS), specialising in intelligent parking guidance and management systems. TCS offers consulting solutions and systems design for a wide range of clients including cities, transportation organisati
January 2, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Norwegian-headquartered tolling specialist 108 Q-Free is to acquire 100 per cent of the shares of 7045 TCS International (TCS).

Established more than ten years ago, TCS has fifteen employees, with offices in Boston, US, and a subsidiary in Toronto, Canada.  The company provides advanced transportation management systems (ATMS), specialising in intelligent parking guidance and management systems. TCS offers consulting solutions and systems design for a wide range of clients including cities, transportation organisations, airports, hospitals, convention and shopping centres, casinos, colleges, and large employer parking lots.

“TCS is a market leader within parking guidance systems in the US and Canada, and as such will form a strong basis for further growth within the parking technology market, both inside and outside north America. Furthermore this acquisition represents an important first step towards building an ATMS business line in Q-Free, adding to our strong tolling activity. This will over time enable increased underlying business and hence decrease the dependency of larger tolling projects”, comments Q-Free CEO, Dr Øyvind Isaksen.

TCS general manager Greg Parzych will continue in that role after the acquisition. He says, “We are looking forward to be an integrated part of a larger world-wide company facilitating both better market reach and new innovative common solutions”.

Isaksen further comments that, “Advanced transportation management and road user charging will over time converge, both from a market and technology platform perspective, and as such it is important for Q-Free to build capabilities in both these areas”.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • European Truck Platooning Challenge gets under way
    April 6, 2016
    Something huge in the field of connected vehicle technology and automated driving, which is grabbing headlines around the world, will arrive here at Intertraffic Amsterdam later today. Dirk-Jan de Bruijn, programme director of the European Truck Platooning Challenge 2016, sets the scene and looks to the future.
  • Tattile buys Comark to advance traffic optimisation
    July 18, 2024
    Companies will work together on free-flow tolling applications and AI-driven systems
  • Home based real time travel information drives reduction in car use
    January 20, 2012
    David Crawford investigates a new approach to discouraging car use - the 'kitchen as travel centre'. ITS technology working together with UK planning legislation is driving an innovative 'kitchen as travel centre' approach to home design which is boosting public transport as an alternative to car use. The combination is already proving powerful enough to assuage environmentalist opposition to major urban developments. It is also being seen as a way of delivering wider social and community benefits inside an
  • Integrating traffic management and tolling technologies
    April 25, 2013
    Jamie Surkont, head of road safety enforcement with Kapsch, outlines the company’s efforts to set up and align new traffic management business units with its more widely recognised tolling expertise The blurring of ITS applications’ edges brought about by systems’ increasing functionalities will ensure that many of the technologies which we have come to rely on for road and traffic management will find it increasingly difficult to exist or operate within tight market verticals. At the same time, systems man