Skip to main content

Siemens and WJ partner on workzones

Temporary automatic speed cameras will include Siemens' SafeZone system
By David Arminas August 7, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The Tascar solution will help enforce mandatory speed limits.

Siemens Mobility and WJ Group will work in partnership to deliver systems for temporary automatic speed cameras at road works (Tascar) in the UK.

The Tascar solution will be deployed to enforce mandatory speed limits and will feature Siemens Mobility’s Hota (Home Office Type Approval) approved SafeZone system incorporating the company’s Sicore II ANPR camera.

This can process up to 2,500 fast-moving vehicles per lane, per hour.

“This strategic partnership with Siemens Mobility will no doubt stimulate ideas for further road safety improvements in line with our continual drive for innovation,” said Wayne Johnston, managing director of WJ.

“This is an opportunity for us to upgrade our safety enforcement cameras and better service our customers with industry-leading technology.”

Deploying distance-over-time enforcement solutions at road works effectively controls traffic speed and improves traffic flow, especially where narrow lanes and contraflows impact on safety.

Sicore technology uses the latest camera sensors to provide evidentially-secure identification in all conditions, lending itself to this automated Tascar enforcement solution, explained Wilke Reints, managing director of Siemens Mobility’s ITS business in the UK.

Using police sites or Siemens Mobility’s hosted environment in the southern English town of Poole, the Evidence Retrieval and Control Units will be set up to collect the data and check for speed violations between defined camera pairs, as well as the Offence Viewing and Decision Systems to view, verify and process offence data.

Where the hosted option is used, Siemens will send secure evidence to the authorities, significantly reducing their administrative burden.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Keeping cities moving: five ways to manage traffic better with smart video
    May 3, 2022
    Excessive traffic is a growing issue on road networks around the world, and reliance on private vehicles is still increasing. The good news for authorities is that the latest smart video technologies can help to keep traffic flowing – cutting journey times, increasing road safety, and helping to reduce vehicle emissions, says Juan Sádaba, ITS Business Development Manager at Hikvision Spain
  • Artificial Intelligence applications for commercial vehicle operations
    December 28, 2021
    The combination of machine learning, deep neural networks and computer vision provides opportunities to address in new ways an increasing range of functions that are a part of commercial vehicle operations. Here, IRD’s Rish Malhotra details how.
  • Siemens’ Stratos offers scalable solution
    May 31, 2013
    Developed using the latest cloud-based technology, Siemens says its Stratos system delivers scalable real-time traffic management, information and control, from basic monitoring to strategic control of complex urban traffic environments. Proven traffic management systems have been integrated to create Stratos and provide streamlined, seamless user interaction with access anywhere on smart mobile devices as well as traditional control rooms. Siemens says Stratos is the complete solution for car parking, VMS,
  • Trials of new technologies to counter age-old work zone challenges
    May 19, 2017
    New solutions are being used to improve the management and safety of work zones on roads both big and small, as Jon Masters discovers. The UK government has recently been going to some lengths to paint a picture of a nation embracing a future of digital technology – understandably given the economic concerns arising from exiting the European Union. In December last year, however, the UK National Infrastructure Commission (NIC) put down a somewhat different marker for where the UK is now in terms of mobile c