Skip to main content

Major ANPR installations for Lector Vision

Spanish vision systems company Lector Vision has seen the demand for its automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) systems rise in the past few months. The company has deployed over 70 ANPR parking systems for Spanish airport authority AENA at Madrid and Bilbao airports, using its Access Eye multi lane/multi plate combined camera and CPU systems and Access Eye remote processing cameras. A minimum of two cameras per parking lane have been installed, together with management software to handle image vir
April 23, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Spanish vision systems company 7545 Lector Vision has seen the demand for its automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) systems rise in the past few months.

The company has deployed over 70 ANPR parking systems for Spanish airport authority AENA at Madrid and Bilbao airports, using its Access Eye multi lane/multi plate combined camera and CPU systems and Access Eye remote processing cameras.

A minimum of two cameras per parking lane have been installed, together with management software to handle image virtualisation, real time traffic management, user handling, black list handling, plate/ticket comparison at exit, together with statistics and web interface.

The city of Huesca in north eastern Spain has also purchased Traffic Eye ANPR camera systems for traffic management and red light enforcement.  Eighteen ANPR 'all in one' systems, which include black and white and colour cameras as well as an internal CPU have been deployed for traffic management and old town access control, while a further unit will be used for red light enforcement.  Traffic Eye is capable of detecting red light offences across two adjacent lanes, providing an economic red light enforcement solution.

Lector Vision has also deployed over twenty Access Eye ANPR systems in Chile and a further twelve in Colombia at Santa Fe Mall in Medellin.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Xerox automates HOV/HOT enforcement
    May 27, 2014
    Counting the number of people in a vehicle has always been a manual task, but now Xerox has developed a real-time system to automate the process. Xerox has introduced an automated system that determines the number of passengers in a vehicle, enabling authorities to detect non-qualifying drivers using the High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) and High Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes. Traditionally HOV/HOT enforcement has entailed local police visually confirming each vehicle has the required number of occupants and chasin
  • Faster more flexible ANPR from Imagsa
    November 22, 2012
    Imagsa’s latest Atalaya automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) camera is more flexible and has more processing power, thanks to the company’s proprietary FPGA processor coupled to a CMOS sensor which allows the camera to operate at 270 frames per second. Although Imagsa say this isn’t necessarily needed for ANPR, the camera works under any conditions and at this frame rate can accurately detect a vehicle ten times in three metres at speeds of up to 250 km/h, even in heavy rain or in direct sunlight.
  • Tattile aids digital parking enforcement 
    June 18, 2021
    French capital Paris has 25 vehicles equipped with Tattile ANPR cameras 
  • UTMC ANPR communications protocol aids traffic management
    January 30, 2012
    Telematics Technology's Peter Billington describes the effort to give English local authorities and police forces a UTMC ANPR open communication protocol. The story of the impact of communication protocols on the development and utilisation of intelligent equipment is a familiar one both inside and outside the ITS industry. At the outset, a company pioneering its latest technology invariably develops a proprietary protocol. This enables the company's products to talk to the customer systems which need to a