Skip to main content

Telensa smart parking technology deployed in Minsk

Smart city solutions provider Telensa has announced a major new smart parking deployment in Minsk, Belarus. Led by Russian partner Gorizont-Telecom, the deployment will lead to smart parking technology in more than 3,000 parking spaces across the capital. The solution has been built on Telensa ultra narrow band (UNB) wireless technology and involves small battery-powered sensors set into the road surface of each street parking space. These sensors detect when a vehicle is parked above them and wirelessl
October 20, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Smart city solutions provider 7574 Telensa has announced a major new smart parking deployment in Minsk, Belarus.

Led by Russian partner Gorizont-Telecom, the deployment will lead to smart parking technology in more than 3,000 parking spaces across the capital. The solution has been built on Telensa ultra narrow band (UNB) wireless technology and involves small battery-powered sensors set into the road surface of each street parking space.  These sensors detect when a vehicle is parked above them and wirelessly communicate with laptop-sized Telensa base stations, each of which looks after thousands of sensors over a range of up to 8 kilometres.  The sensors have a battery life of five years, even in the challenging low temperatures of a Minsk winter.

The real-time occupancy data from the sensors is used to inform three cloud-based systems. The central administration system provides the city with detailed analytics on capacity trends and bottlenecks, the phone app helps drivers find spaces and so reduces pollution, while the civil enforcement officer app reduces the cost of enforcement by directing officers to precisely where infringements are taking place in real time.

Telensa CEO Will Gibson said, “Smart city applications won’t become ubiquitous until a multi-purpose wireless technology emerges that can be deployed easily, that works reliably at massive scale and that delivers a compelling business case.  Telensa UNB increasingly looks like the catalyst to make all cities smart and we’re delighted to see Minsk and Gorizont at the forefront of this movement.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Driverless vehicles will cause changes in society
    May 31, 2013
    Paul Godsmark gives his views on what the advent of autonomous vehicles would mean for the wider society. Further to your article ‘Driver not required…’ in the Jan/Feb edition of ITS International which gave some great background to autonomous road vehicle (ARVs), I feel that the bigger picture is needed to aid understanding. There is a ‘technology freight train’ heading our way that is going to transform our roadways but we don’t seem to be aware of it and, therefore, are in no hurry to react.
  • Righter shade of pale
    July 24, 2012
    Jon Tarleton, Quixote Transportation Technologies, Inc., talks about developments in mobile weather information gathering Quixote Transportation Technologies, Inc. (QTT) is promoting the greater use of mobile technologies to provide infill between fixed Road Weather Information System (RWIS) infrastructure. It is, the company says, a means of reducing the expense of providing comprehensive, network-wide coverage, particularly in geographic locations where the sheer number of centreline miles causes cost to
  • UK should consider 'road miles' pricing, says AA
    June 8, 2020
    Motoring organisation urges 'more radical thinking' after lockdown
  • Carlos Moreno: ‘I’ve had a lot of death threats over 15-minute cities’
    May 4, 2023
    Carlos Moreno, inventor of the 15-minute city concept, talks to Adam Hill about misinformation, conspiracy theories and the attraction of ‘human smart cities’