Skip to main content

Russia solution digitises city traffic

Moscow-based Urbantech's mobile laboratories use machine vision and Lidars
By Eugene Gerden May 25, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Digitisation of a 'standard' city takes two weeks, says Urbantech (© BiancoBlue | Dreamstime.com)

A new solution for the digitalisation of a city's roads and infrastructure has been officially presented in Russia.

Created by Moscow-based Urbantech, one of the leading Russian designers of ITS solutions, it was showcased at Intelligent  Transport Systems - Regions, the ITS exhibition recently held in the Kaluga region. 

According to the developers, the solution helps regional transport authorities gather up-to-date data on the condition of road facilities, to take prompt measures to restore damaged infrastructure, as well as to automatically prepare all the necessary documentation for the organisation of a reliable system of road traffic.

Mobile laboratories carry out automated digitisation of highways as they pass through a city to collect reliable information - with accurate measurements of coordinates and parameters of objects with panoramic photographs.

The system uses machine vision, neural network analysis and Lidars, allowing the online regime to identify and classify various road objects (traffic lights, road signs, road surface) and their current state with a positioning accuracy of 10cm.

The data is then supplied to transport authorities. 

One mobile laboratory can cover 150km per day, with photo panoramas and object passports provided the next day.

Digitisation of a 'standard' city (with a road network up to 1,000 km and mainly two-lane traffic in each direction) takes no more than two weeks. 

The system can be used not only for primary digitisation, i.e. the creation of a digital duplicate, but also for regular monitoring of road infrastructure.

The new data is placed on the existing duplicate, which allows weaknesses of road traffic to be identified in a particular city or a region, which means authorities can take necessary measures to prevent possible road accidents and congestion.

Related Content

  • March 8, 2023
    Aimsun solutions support new planning tool for low-carbon mobility
    The EU-funded HARMONY research project is behind a new planning tool to support sustainable transport policymaking. Aimsun scientific researcher Lampros Yfantis explains the key role of traffic simulation with Aimsun Ride in planning for on-demand mobility and logistics services
  • August 14, 2017
    VTT to develop ITS in cooperation with ITS Russia
    VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and ITS Russia are to partner on the development of intelligent transport systems (ITS). The aim of Project CAVLANE is to develop new services, products and standards, particularly for border crossings. Part of the project involves testing ITS services for drivers before and after border crossings, such as queue cautions that are hoped to make traffic flow more smoothly at the Nuijamaa border crossing point and standardised European Union vehicle to vehicle (V2V)
  • June 9, 2015
    Ukraine turns to ITS to cope with traffic increases
    With increasing road fatalities the Ukrainian government is planning to introduce ITS technology in 2016-2017. Eugene Gerden finds out more. The government of Ukraine is considering a massive introduction of ITS in the national system of traffic during the period 2016-2017, according to a recent statement by the Ukrainian Ministry of Transport. According to the Ukrainian government, implementation of the project is an acute need, as in recent years the number of road accidents in Ukraine has significantly
  • November 21, 2012
    Developing new detection and monitoring technologies
    Established detection and monitoring technologies continue to evolve, but is it time to challenge their supremacy and take a serious look at less conventional ITS? Andy Graham considers the options with Jason Barnes. For ITS system providers, the most potentially lucrative markets over the next few years are going to be the BRIC (Brazil Russia India and China) group of countries, all of which are building many miles of new roads, applying tolling to existing ones (8,000km in China alone) and implementing w