Skip to main content

Jenoptik installs police-enforced average speed scheme on private roads

Company says ANPR set-up at DP World logistics park near London will cut collisions
By Adam Hill March 7, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Members of the public had been using the private roads "as a racetrack" (image: Jenoptik)

Jenoptik has installed an average speed camera enforcement scheme to make roads safer at a major logistics park near London.
 
The company says it is the first time an average speed scheme has been installed on private roads in the UK.

Offences at the DP World complex at the London Gateway port in south Essex will be enforced by Essex Police as they would on any other road, with the same penalties.  

Under the Road Traffic Act 1984, the private network is still subject to all traffic laws because roads are accessible to the public.
 
Jenoptik says there had been "a number of incidents on its roads due to speeding, both by members of the public using the roads as a racetrack, and staff at businesses based there not adhering to the limits".
 
As a result, 16 Jenoptik SPECS3 Vector cameras have been installed to cover three main routes across the site - the 40 mph Port Access Road, the 30mph Ocean Boulevard and Atlantic Avenue.

They have been mounted on existing street lighting columns, thus minimising infrastructure costs. The enforced limits have been applied with Traffic Regulation Orders and signing checked to ensure they are legally enforceable.

The ANPR technology monitors vehicles as they pass fixed points on the road, then calculate the time taken compared with how long it should take if the vehicle was driving at the speed limit. 

Jenoptik says research shows fatal and serious collisions are reduced by 50% following installation of the technology.
 
Account manager Timo Thornton said the time from order to completion was just 12 weeks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • NeuroCar demonstrates average speed enforcement
    February 8, 2016
    Polish company Neurosoft will be at Intertraffic Amsterdam to boost its international presence and highlight its NeuroCar product line which acts as a component for road data acquisition, as a state-of-the-art vehicle identification tool, or a turnkey system to meet specific needs. The company’s software technology has been chosen by the Ministry of Transport, Shipping and Communications of the Republic of Turkey to introduce a vehicle identification system in Ankara.
  • Lithuania installs average speed cameras
    July 20, 2015
    Police in Lithuania have begun installing average speed cameras on a five kilometre section of the Via Baltica highway, according to the Lithuanian Tribune. Following a trial period, there are plans to expand the network of such cameras, commented Commissioner General of Police Linas Pernavas. "Developed EU members states have long concluded that it's more effective to calculate the medium speed on the section of several or several dozen kilometres, rather that measuring the instant speed. The Via Balti
  • Acusensus phone-detection units arrive on English roads
    August 1, 2023
    Australian road safety company says trailer units will be positioned on selected highways
  • Gotcha with Genetec’s AutoVu ANPR Reports
    May 7, 2025
    Firm says product will speed up law enforcement investigations