Skip to main content

ITS from Indra helps Colombia tunnels

Tolling and communications are also major part of new Latin American infrastructure project
By Adam Hill October 31, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Indra is instrumental in Bogotá-Villavicencio corridor final section in Colombia (image: Indra)

Indra has provided ITS for a massive road and tunnel project in Colombia.

Consorcio Vial Andino (Conandino), builder of the new freeway between Chirajara and Fundadores, awarded the project to the Indra-Comsa consortium for €20 million. 

Indra has equipped  the new tunnels and open-air roads of the Bogotá-Villavicencio corridor final section in Colombia with its Mova Traffic solution.

The company has renovated the Buenavista control centre, installing its Horus traffic and tunnel management platform, part of Indra Mova Traffic, to control the new section and its six tunnels, including the 4.5km-long Buenavista, one of the longest tunnels in Latin America.

As well as ITS, the consortium will also implement communications systems (Mova Comms), safety systems (Mova Protect), CCTV, traffic counters, road signs, emergency call boxes, fire detection, lightning control and PA systems, among others.

Indra has also upgraded and expanded the existing toll stations (Boquerón, Naranjal and Pipiral), implementing the Mova Collect toll system in a bid to reduce congestion at these points.

The Buenavista control centre, together with the main control centre in Boquerón and the one in Naranjal, also allow centralised monitoring and control of the entire concession with a single interface.

Indra's Horus platform already handles the management of the 27 tunnels that are part of the Bogotá-Villavicencio dual carriageway, a highway with more than 12,000 vehicles per day. The new section will reduce travel time along this corridor, used mainly by the tourism and freight sectors, by an additional 22 minutes.

"It is a good opportunity to showcase our advanced technology and Indra's ability to carry out the most ambitious and complex projects. But the true value of technology is to contribute to economic and social development and improve people's lives. In this case, we are sure that the freeway and its advanced solutions will do that," said Manuel López Villena, Director of Traffic and Infrastructures in Indra's Mobility market.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Indra picks up €75m dynamic toll system deal in US
    October 31, 2019
    Indra has been awarded a €75 million deal for work to switch a major US roadway to dynamic pricing.
  • Highways Agency awards maintenance contracts to telent
    June 18, 2014
    Technology services company telent has won three prestigious five year contracts worth over US$25.4 million with the UK Highways Agency to maintain critical roadside technology across the east, south-east and M25 regions' motorways and trunk roads. telent now manages all routine and reactive maintenance for over 12,000 technology assets, such as emergency roadside telephones, message signs, traffic signal sites, the Highways Agency weather stations, CCTV cameras, tunnels and many more. The company’
  • Tecsidel’s Pan-American Highway tunnel eases Lima’s traffic woes
    December 4, 2018
    The Pan-American Highway connects the US and Canada with Latin America, running for thousands of miles from Alaska in the north to Argentina in the south. Mauro Nogarin finds that one tunnel built underneath it is now providing relief for thousands of travellers each day On the Pan-American Highway, the lengthy series of roads which spans both American continents - from the US state of Alaska to the Latin American country of Argentina - ITS solutions are many and varied. One of these, in Peru’s capital
  • Virginia presses ahead with tunnels upgrade despite tolls challenge
    July 30, 2013
    David Crawford reviews current developments and legal/financial issues facing tunnel management in Virginia. This autumn the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) in the US will defend its plan to introduce tolling on the Elizabeth River tunnels linking the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth in the State’s Hampton Roads area. The tolling, which is due to start from February 2014, will be examined by the State’s Supreme Court later this year. The anticipated toll income, along with loans and bonds, is