Skip to main content

Indra to help improve public transport management in Wroclaw, Poland

Indra, Spain’s leading IT multinational, has been awarded a contract with the Public Transportation Municipal Company in Wroclaw, which is the fourth largest city in Poland, to install its intelligent public transportation management technology for US$22.23 million and a one year execution period. Indra will install an operations assistance system (OAS) that includes passenger information subsystems, fleet management and video surveillance for 251 vehicles, 136 buses and 115 trams in the city. The OAS will
March 22, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
509 Indra, Spain’s leading IT multinational, has been awarded a contract with the Public Transportation Municipal Company in Wroclaw, which is the fourth largest city in Poland, to install its intelligent public transportation management technology for US$22.23 million and a one year execution period.

Indra will install an operations assistance system (OAS) that includes passenger information subsystems, fleet management and video surveillance for 251 vehicles, 136 buses and 115 trams in the city. The OAS will provide greater management efficiency and improve the quality of the services offered to residents, information about demand, employee and user safety, vandalism control and accident audits.

The OAS, the brains behind passenger transport, will consist of three basic pillars: on-board GPS-based management, control and location equipment; a mobile communications infrastructure based on GPRS and 3G technology; and the control centre, which monitors and controls the service and is based on geographic information systems (GIS) that make it possible to know the location of any fleet vehicle at any moment and to make decisions in real time in the event of incidents, reinforcement needs, etc. The solution will also include tools for generating reports and graphs, which facilitate supervising the service and measuring its quality parameters so it may be better adjusted to actual citizen demands.

This technology makes it possible to manage the on-board public information system from the control centre. The system provides information to passengers such as the next stop, possible incidents, estimated arrival times, and also allows to manage the broadcast of advertising, news or entertainment content, among others.

The on-board video surveillance system will also be fully integrated with the OAS and it will allow to record, transmit and view images in real time. Each vehicle will be equipped with several cameras (in some cases up to ten) with the aim of offering increased safety to employees and users, while dissuading and helping prevent possible aggressions or vandalism to windows and seats, which is a practice that results in significant maintenance costs for public passenger transportation companies. One of the cameras - the ‘driver's eye’ - will focus on the road ahead to view exactly what the driver sees, which will be a great assistance for audits that are performed in the event of an accident as well as for the control centre to know the status of traffic or possible incidents in real time.

In addition, 18 vehicles will be equipped with a passenger counter system that will record the number of passengers who board and exit, making it possible to know the current occupancy so as to avoid surpassing the maximum capacity, request reinforcement vehicles for demand peaks, perform mobility studies, etc. The project also includes a navigation support system for drivers that provides voice orders from the control centre for regulating the service.

All the technology installed by Indra is especially designed to support extreme temperature conditions since Wroclaw can drop below -15ºC in the winter.

This Polish project reinforces Indra as one of the leading companies for public transportation operations assistance systems, with nearly 10,000 vehicles managed using its technology throughout the world and references in countries that include Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Argentina, Morocco, Portugal and Spain. The company’s solution has also proven its versatility by allowing it to manage railway lines, trams and buses for short, medium or long distance routes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Automating seat belt compliance a priority for road safety
    February 2, 2012
    Finland's VTT is developing a mobile, automated seatbelt compliance system. Here, the organisation's Matti Kutila discusses progress
  • Spokane Transit Authority expands public transport system
    January 10, 2013
    Public transport passengers in Spokane, Washington, US, are to get real time transit information both on and off the vehicle. Passenger transport systems provider Trapeze Group is to extend the current Spokane Transit Authority (STA) Trapeze transit enterprise system to include a comprehensive intelligent transportation system to help them better manage their fixed-route bus service and provide passengers with real time transit information. The Trapeze solution for STA includes computer-aided dispatch and
  • Indra deploys advanced communications network for Buenos Aires trains
    May 30, 2017
    Spanish technology company Indra has deployed an advanced communications network for public rail operator Operadora Ferroviaria Sociedad del Estado to provide service for the rail network in Argentina connecting the city of Buenos Aires with urban and suburban towns in its metropolitan area
  • Assessing the potential of in-vehicle enforcement systems
    December 4, 2012
    Jason Barnes considers the social and ethical ramifications of using in-vehicle safety technologies to fulfil enforcement functions. Although policy documents often imply close correlation between enforcement, compliance and safety – in part, as a counter to accusations that enforcement is rather more concerned with revenue generation – there is a noticeable reluctance among policy makers and auto manufacturers to exploit in-vehicle safety systems for enforcement applications. From a technical perspective t