Skip to main content

Yunex completes Poland ITS project

City of Tychy now has 40 modern intersections and is future-proofed for AV operation
By Adam Hill July 5, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
There is now priority at intersections for over 170 buses and trolleybuses, as well as 15 emergency vehicles (image credit: Yunex Traffic)

Yunex Traffic has completed work on what it says is the most advanced traffic control system in Poland.

More than 40 intersections in Tychy, about 20km south of Katowice, have been built or modernised, and a full traffic control and monitoring system has been installed. 

There is now priority at intersections for over 170 buses and trolleybuses, as well as 15 emergency vehicles.

"ITS gives us a whole range of tools and possibilities to conduct various analyses, measurements and traffic simulations," says Andrzej Dziuba, mayor of Tychy. "All this is to make the roads in Tychy safer and the traffic flow smoother."

Yunex carried out the work between 2019 and June this year, at a cost of approximately PLN 121m (€25.5m), nearly 85% of which was co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund, from the pool for low-emission urban transport.

At the heart of the system is a traffic control centre in the Tychy stadium, which takes information from almost 600 monitoring cameras, together with a number plate recognition system.

In the event of an accident, the system will enable warning messages to be displayed on 72 boards.

Nearly 20 weather, pollution and noise monitoring stations have been installed on the streets of Tychy, as well as 20 parking space information boards and six stands for charging electric vehicles.

There are also six speed measurement sections and five dynamic weighing stations for lorries in motion, and Yunex says the roads are future-proofed to allow the eventual introduction of autonomous vehicles.

Yunex has ITS projects in a number of Polish cities, including Warsaw, Cracow, Poznań, Białystok and Rzeszów.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Denmark's Brobizz chooses Kapsch for tolling technology
    September 22, 2023
    From 1 January 2025, Denmark is introducing GNSS-based tolling for heavy goods vehicles
  • India to bring ATMS to all roads
    June 15, 2021
    Safety tech is needed as India accounts for 10% of global fatal road accidents, says IRF
  • Greenowl brings bespoke traveller information one step closer
    June 4, 2015
    Greenowl’s voice-only congestion warning smartphone app alerts drivers to problems ahead and could be the way ahead for traffic information. If there is one point Matt Man, CEO of Canadian company Greenowl, wants to make clear from the start, it is that his company’s app is not a navigation system. He says: “Our system does not direct drivers to their destination because we mainly focus on commuters who know how to get to where they are going and only need information about any delays and incidents ahead of
  • Lacroix launches new range of multi-colour LED VMS
    February 26, 2014
    Lacroix Trafic will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to present a wide range of ITS products such as traffic lights, traffic controllers, and data-collection stations, variable speed limit signs, directional lane signs as well as to unveil a new range of multicolour LED full matrix variable messages signs (VMS). Using the latest CMS diode technology means these multi-coloured messages can be viewed at distances of up to 300 metres. The signs are easy to configure, with tool-free maintenance, and of course