Skip to main content

Mexico opts for Sensys enforcement

Sensys Traffic is to supply a customer in Mexico with speed and red-light monitoring systems. The order, worth around US$174,000, was received after successful testing had been carried out with Sensys' partner in Mexico following a pilot order in the previous year.
September 1, 2014 Read time: 1 min
569 Sensys Traffic is to supply a customer in Mexico with speed and red-light monitoring systems.

The order, worth around US$174,000, was received after successful testing had been carried out with Sensys' partner in Mexico following a pilot order in the previous year.

“We are happy to be able to take the next step in Mexico and set up and deploy systems for both speed monitoring and red-light monitoring. This is a market with a great long-term potential, which also has several challenges within the area of traffic safety,” says Johan Frilund, CEO of Sensys Traffic.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • San Diego: Let there be (street)light
    March 30, 2020
    The influence of intelligent streetlights is spreading. David Crawford finds that San Diego’s deployment – and attendant legislation – may offer a blueprint for other cities going forward
  • Dutch strike public/private balance to introduce C-ITS services
    November 15, 2017
    Connected-ITS applications are due to appear on a nation-wide scale this summer, through the Netherlands’ Talking Traffic Partnership – if all goes to plan. Jon Masters reports. The Netherlands’ Talking Traffic Partnership (TTP) looks almost too good to be true: an artificial market set up and supported by national, regional and local government to accelerate deployment of Connected ITS (C-ITS) applications. If it does have any serious flaws, these are going to become apparent quite soon, because the first
  • Mexico’s Durango-Mazatlan highway sets tunnel safety standard
    August 26, 2016
    Mauro Nogarin looks at the management of the longer tunnels on Mexico’s Durango-Mazatlan highway. In recent years the National Infrastructure Fund of Mexico has increased investment in the installation of ITS systems on selected highways to increase road safety. One such major investment is the 230km long Durango-Mazatlan highway which is 12m in width and has an average speed of 110km/h.
  • Detection analysis technology successfully predicts traffic flows
    February 3, 2012
    David Crawford investigates new detection analysis technology from IBM. Locations on both the East and West Coasts of the US are scheduled for early deployments of IBM's new Traffic Prediction Tool (TPT) statistical analysis model for the fine-time resolution and near-term prediction of road flow conditions. Developed by IBM's Watson Research Laboratories, TPT is designed to analyse data from the the key detection indicators - average vehicle volumes and speeds passing a location in a given time interval -