Skip to main content

Gatso to unveil visionary new platform

In February, ITS International learned that Gatso had just begun secret trials in the US of a new camera system. From a photograph, the radical modern new design of the cabinet suggested that the interior components were likely to have been upgraded. When Timo Gatsonides, managing director of the company, agreed to an exclusive interview with news editor James Foster about what we had seen, that upgrade assumption proved to be an understatement. The Gatso T-series platform, which will be unveiled to the wo
June 19, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
In February, 1846 ITS International learned that 1679 Gatso had just begun secret trials in the US of a new camera system. From a photograph, the radical modern new design of the
cabinet suggested that the interior components were likely to have been upgraded. When Timo Gatsonides, managing director of the company, agreed to an exclusive interview
with news editor James Foster about what we had seen, that upgrade assumption proved to be an understatement. 

The Gatso T-series platform, which will be unveiled to the world at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2012 at the end of March, is not just a completely new design of technology and components in a radical new cabinet. It was born out of a totally new vision for the present and future needs of the enforcement sector that Gatso created when it introduced the world’s first speed camera in 1964.

It would be fair, if a slight over simplification, to say that, the company has traditionally focused on the technology side of its products and ensuring, for instance, the integrity of the evidence produced. That is still very much the case, Gatsonides says. For instance, at the heart of the T-series platform is the compact Gatso GT20 camera, exclusively designed by the company (see page 66).

“In addition to the technical aspects, with the T-series we have also specifically focused on wider, and equally important, aspects. Ease of installation and maintenance and improved violation efficiency. We’ve concentrated on providing the lowest cost of ownership and maximising the return on investment, which are becoming much more important. Future proofing and making the platform extensible,” Gatsonides said. Asked to quantify future proofing, Gatsonides revealed that the T-series platform has the built-in technological capability to provide much more than traditional speed and red light enforcement functions. This includes things like amber alerts, flagging up black list or  suspect vehicles for wider crime prevention or producing statistics – a full range of additional functions based on ANPR.

“Based on what we set out to achieve when we first began work on this new platform, the pilot trial is already proving that we have unveiled a new era in traffic camera systems,”  Gatsonides states. “So we are keen to show the world our new vision for this industry during 70 Intertraffic.

Related Content

  • May 8, 2013
    Gatso T-series type approved in the Netherlands
    Gatso’s T-Series Statio red light and speed enforcement solution, which uses the company’s RT3 tracking radar, has received type approval from the Netherlands Institute for metrology and technology (NMi). Exclusively designed by Gatso for traffic enforcement purposes, tracking radar has not previously been approved in the Netherlands. The RT3 enables the detection of multiple concurrent violations, including speeding, and continuously and simultaneously measures the speed and position of up to twelve vehic
  • March 1, 2013
    Bringing enforcement standards into line
    Difficulties with the apparent accuracy of enforcement systems have been making the headlines in the United States over recent months. Jon Masters investigates the causes and possible cures. Online newspaper reports in the United States over recent months have painted a picture of the authorities struggling to keep on top of their speed and red light enforcement pro­grammes. Among a host of stories put out by the Washington Post and others on the subject of speed cameras during January, there were reports
  • August 21, 2015
    Sensys Gatso Group reorganises
    Following the acquisition of Gatso, the Sensys Gatso Group has announced its new organisational structure, with the creation of two separate business units: The Systems business unit comprises the whole systems organisation, consisting mainly of the existing operations in Sweden and the Netherlands as well as the sales offices in Germany, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates. The unit will be headed by Göran Löfqvist, who has worked for Sensys for 15 years, as executive vice president Systems The Ma
  • March 1, 2013
    Gatso’s mobile speed enforcement approved in France
    Gatso’s T-Series based Millia in-vehicle speed enforcement solution has been type approved by the French Laboratoire national de métrologie et d’essais (LNE) for use in France. According to Gatso, its Millia solutions reduce speed related crashes by enforcing the speed limit. For in-vehicle use, the system components are integrated into an enforcement vehicle without altering the appearance of the vehicle. Depending on the chosen strategy, the operator can choose to enforce approaching or receding traffic o