Skip to main content

Jenoptik Specs cameras for Manchester

Deal in the UK city comes after 90 Vector SR spot-speed systems supplied last year
By David Arminas April 16, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Manchester is 'working to adopt Vision Zero' (image: Jenoptik)

Jenoptik has secured an order from Transport for Greater Manchester to install the company’s Specs average-speed cameras across 25 routes in the English city.

The company said that the deal marks the second phase of an upgrade project in the area to encourage better driver behaviour. In the first phase, last year, Jenoptik delivered 90 Vector SR spot-speed systems.

Both contracts include the supply, installation and maintenance of the solutions for five years, noted Tobias Deubel, head of Jenoptik’s smart mobility solutions division. “Transport for Greater Manchester is taking considerable action to upgrade its road safety measures to get closer to Vision Zero,” he said. “We are proud to be part of it by providing technology and services for spot speed and average speed measurement.”

The cameras from both phases are specifically used to enforce speed limits and do not automatically detect another offence. Average speed cameras have also been found to improve air quality and reduce emissions. Jenoptik will present its full range of products and services at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2024 this week.

The locations for the cameras were carefully selected with the help of analysis carried out by Transport for Greater Manchester, the Greater Manchester Police and Jenoptik. “Independent analysis of statistics on roads with average speed cameras show that the technology has contributed to casualty reduction by halving the number of crashes, where someone was either killed or seriously injured,” explained John Piper, Jenoptik’s UK sales and marketing director.

“As a city-region we are working to adopt Vision Zero, which targets the elimination of all deaths and life-changing injuries on our roads,” said Dame Sarah Storey, Greater Manchester’s active travel commissioner. “Speeding is a leading cause behind fatal collisions and in Greater Manchester 598 people were killed or seriously injured between 2020 and 2022 as a result of it.”

Related Content

  • London’s mayor launches bus safety programme
    February 2, 2016
    The Mayor of London and Transport for London (TfL) have launched a world-leading programme to drive major improvements in safety across London's bus network, creating a six-point programme to reduce collisions and improve safety. The programme will bring together the newest technology, training, incentives, support, reporting and transparency right across the network, contributing to TfL's work towards meeting the mayor's target of halving the number of people killed or seriously injured on the capital's
  • Positive results for New South Wales camera enforcement
    July 20, 2016
    The New South Wales government’s 2015 speed camera review shows that speed cameras continue to deliver positive road safety benefits, say the report’s authors. Overall, the trend in road fatalities and annual speed surveys shows that the mobile speed camera program continues to deliver positive road safety benefits, compared with results before the reintroduction of the mobile speed camera program in 2010. The 2014 road toll of 307 fatalities on NSW roads is the lowest annual figure since 1923. This i
  • ITS World Congress debates perceptions of enforcement
    December 4, 2012
    The technical programme of this year’s ITS World Congress in Vienna includes a special session on the image of enforcement. ITS International examines the scale of the problem and what can be done about it. Debate on the merits and difficulties of enforcing speed limits appears centred on a conflict of principles. Put very simply, local communities, people living close to busy or hazardous roads, want to see traffic speeds calmed. Drivers on those roads, on the whole, want their principle of freedom to be m
  • Swedish drivers support speed cameras
    March 17, 2014
    In sharp contrast to many other countries drivers in Sweden support speed cameras and the planned expansion of the automated enforcement network. Sweden is embarking on a massive expansion of its speed camera network and is doing so with both a very high level of public acceptance and without its drivers feeling persecuted; a feat the administrations in many other countries would like to emulate. So how did this envious state of affairs come about? Magnus Ferlander director of business development and ma