Skip to main content

Electronic tolling coming to New Zealand in 2015

New Zealand is to implement multi-lane free flow tolling on key routes in Tauranga later this year, with the installation of two high-tech electronic tolling gantries, each with 16 cameras, on Tauranga Eastern Link (TEL) and Route K. The cameras will capture an image of the vehicle’s front and rear registration plates using the latest optical character recognition technology. The cameras will read the registration plates and determine the size of the vehicle and whether it is a motorcycle, car, truck or
March 27, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
New Zealand is to implement multi-lane free flow tolling on key routes in Tauranga later this year, with the installation of two high-tech electronic tolling gantries, each with 16 cameras, on Tauranga Eastern Link (TEL) and Route K.

The cameras will capture an image of the vehicle’s front and rear registration plates using the latest optical character recognition technology. The cameras will read the registration plates and determine the size of the vehicle and whether it is a motorcycle, car, truck or bus so the correct toll can be assigned.

One of the nine-metre high electronic tolling gantries has been installed on the Tauranga Eastern Link (TEL) ahead of the official opening of the motorway later this year. The second toll gantry will be built on Tauranga’s Route K in April, in preparation for when the 6296 New Zealand Transport Agency takes ownership of the road from Tauranga City Council in July 2015.

According to the Transport Agency’s Waikato/Bay of Plenty regional director, Harry Wilson, the new toll points are the first of their kind in New Zealand.

“Motorists have been using the electronic toll system on the Northern Gateway Toll Road (NGTR), north of Auckland, since 2009; however technology has moved on since the dual-gantry on the NGTR was installed,” Wilson says.

“The gantries in Tauranga are a single gantry which spans all of the lanes and has an exterior cladding.

“All of the technical elements are housed inside the gantry cladding and in the technical shelter on the roadside. This results in a sleeker and more sophisticated design and it also means there is less potential for driver distraction when any maintenance work is carried out.”

Wilson says the main benefit of the free-flow systems being used in Auckland and Tauranga is that there is no need for toll booths, allowing drivers to travel straight through, reducing travel times and providing a more predictable journey.

The Transport Agency is also upgrading the back-end tolling system, offering customers a range of ways to pay their tolls.

The new tolling system is expected to be operational in early July, ahead of the TEL being opened and Route K being electronically tolled.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK tyre monitoring specialist provides technology to US highway project
    December 2, 2016
    UK tyre-monitoring specialist WheelRight has provided its drive-over tyre pressure monitoring technology to The Ray, a US-based project designed to showcase new technologies that will create a blueprint for the sustainable motorways of tomorrow. Comprising an 18-mile stretch of highway on West Georgia’s Interstate 85, The Ray is a proving ground for new ideas and technologies that will transform the transport infrastructure of the future. The environmental project is named after Ray C. Anderson, an Ameri
  • Tecsidel’s Pan-American Highway tunnel eases Lima’s traffic woes
    December 4, 2018
    The Pan-American Highway connects the US and Canada with Latin America, running for thousands of miles from Alaska in the north to Argentina in the south. Mauro Nogarin finds that one tunnel built underneath it is now providing relief for thousands of travellers each day On the Pan-American Highway, the lengthy series of roads which spans both American continents - from the US state of Alaska to the Latin American country of Argentina - ITS solutions are many and varied. One of these, in Peru’s capital
  • Getting more for less from traffic data
    August 15, 2012
    Collection of traffic and transit data has grown significantly, combining with advances in connectivity and computational modelling to good effect. Desire to do more with less – to make budgets go further – has helped create a boom in the collection and study of traffic and transport data. Studies are becoming longer, greater in number and further in-depth as more intelligence is sought, plus, transportation agencies are looking to make processes of data collection less costly, or more efficient.
  • Cepton brings Lidar to tolling deal
    February 14, 2023
    Company's Sora series sensors will be used in California for unnamed customer