Skip to main content

Kapsch free-flow tolls come to New Hampshire

The sites Kapsch will convert from mixed-pay to AET are at Dover, Rochester and Bedford
By Ben Spencer January 14, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Kapsch says drivers will no longer need to stop, slow down or change lanes to pay tolls (© Aerogondo | Dreamstime.com)

Kapsch TrafficCom is to convert three remaining New Hampshire Department of Transportation (NHDoT) toll zones to mainline all-electronic tolling (AET) from mixed-mode payment. 

This project extends Kapsch’s work scope initially contracted in 2015, in which it converted NHDoT toll sites at Hampton and Hooksett to provide a free-flow AET option at those toll plazas.

The sites Kapsch will convert to AET are at Dover, Rochester and Bedford, and will each feature single-gantry architecture that contains all tolling equipment. The Kapsch nVDC stereoscopic video sensor will trigger numberplate reading cameras while supporting vehicle detection and classification, along with sensors and in-pavement treadles. The Kapsch VRX camera will facilitate video tolling for vehicles that do not have a toll transponder.

Kapsch says drivers will no longer need to stop, slow down, or change lanes at any point along these five sites in order to pay tolls, which will help improve traffic congestion, road safety, and vehicle emissions. 

As part of the project, Kapsch will also enhance its existing multiprotocol readers (MPR2.3) along NHDoT toll sites, enabling the agency to process all tolling protocols and support the goal of national tolling interoperability.

JB Kendrick, president of Kapsch TrafficCom North America, says: “The introduction of new free-flow traffic lanes at all NHDoT toll sites will offer drivers increased convenience and faster journeys, and we are glad to partner with NHDoT in this effort by expanding our proven AET solution at all the plaza locations."
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Q-Free promises 'new philosophy' with Kinetic 
    January 11, 2021
    ATMS product is designed to unify standalone operations and foster cooperation, insists firm
  • Federal Signal wins ground-breaking Turkish tolling project
    January 27, 2012
    Federal Signal Technologies (FSTech) and its Turkish integration partner, Litum Technologies, have been awarded a nationwide contract by Vendeka Bilgi Teknolojileri to transition Turkey's in-lane electronic toll collection (ETC) system infrastructure to ISO 18000-6C. With 580 lanes, it will be the first electronic toll collection project using passive UHF RFID technology in Europe.
  • FTA disappointed at Dartford free-flow toll delay
    September 22, 2014
    ‘The delay of the introduction of free-flow tolls at Dartford River Crossing disappointing as it may present additional costs to industry’ is the message from the Freight Transport Association (FTA). The Association has voiced its concern in response to the announcement by the Highways Agency (HA) that the planned technology to allow motorists to use the crossing without having to stop at barriers and pay is to be delayed by up to four weeks. Originally planned to be in place by the 28 October 2014, th
  • Bosch introduces Inteox-based cameras
    April 14, 2021
    Video analytics feature based on deep neural networks helps classify vehicles in congestion