Skip to main content

Traffic enforcement community meets at The Crystal

Siemens ITS is to host its first traffic enforcement user group forum next month. More than 50 road safety and civil enforcement representatives from local authorities across the UK are expected to assemble at The Crystal in London on 9 November to discuss current and future parking and civil enforcement technology in the UK. The meeting aims to provide Siemens ITS civil enforcement customers with the opportunity to share current issues and future requirements and hear what the company is doing to solve
November 1, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
189 Siemens ITS is to host its first traffic enforcement user group forum next month. More than 50 road safety and civil enforcement representatives from local authorities across the UK are expected to assemble at The Crystal in London on 9 November to discuss current and future parking and civil enforcement technology in the UK.

The meeting aims to provide Siemens ITS civil enforcement customers with the opportunity to share current issues and future requirements and hear what the company is doing to solve a range of road safety and civil enforcement problems for its users. Siemens will also present its latest traffic enforcement solutions, including the LaneWatch Mk3 camera for unattended moving traffic enforcement. Siemens will also present LaneWatch SKC for the automatic detection and identification of vehicles parking/stopping on a school zig-zag during enforcement hours and the TrafficWatch PTZ, an attended parking enforcement camera.

The Crystal, the venue for the event, is a sustainable cities initiative from Siemens which offers an educational experience and an opportunity for visitors to explore the major trends and challenges facing cities today.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Diversity dominates ITS recruitment workshop
    October 27, 2016
    ITS offers more interesting and engaging careers than other engineering disciplines because it is less component-based and gives more importance to human factors and the integration of other domains. So says the report from a multinational recruitment stakeholder workshop staged by ITS(UK) at the 2016 ITS in Europe Congress.
  • Cooperative infrastructure an aid to environmental aims
    February 3, 2012
    Speculate to accumulate Andras Kovacs looks at how the historical focus of cooperative infrastructure on safety can be oriented to aid emerging environmental aims
  • Home based real time travel information drives reduction in car use
    January 20, 2012
    David Crawford investigates a new approach to discouraging car use - the 'kitchen as travel centre'. ITS technology working together with UK planning legislation is driving an innovative 'kitchen as travel centre' approach to home design which is boosting public transport as an alternative to car use. The combination is already proving powerful enough to assuage environmentalist opposition to major urban developments. It is also being seen as a way of delivering wider social and community benefits inside an
  • Traffic to flow freely over world’s widest bridge
    November 13, 2012
    Pete Goldin reports on a new Egis project in Canada, providing open road tolling operations for the widest bridge in the world. A bridge can present a bottleneck in a system of roads or it can support the smooth and unobstructed flow of traffic. Much depends on the bridge design, surrounding infrastructure and tolling system. By adding lanes and deploying open road tolling (ORT), the new Port Mann Bridge located in the metropolitan Vancouver area in British Columbia, will alleviate congestion at one of the