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

  • September 28, 2021
    Cepton and Belam boost railway safety
    Cepton says the system has achieved an accuracy of over 99.9% in obstacle detection
  • August 19, 2015
    Vehicular networking architecture for local road weather services
    The Finnish Meteorological Institute is currently testing two-way delivery of local weather data as Timo Sukuvaara explains. Road weather information is one of the key ways in which ITS can help reduce traffic accidents and fatalities – which is why the Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI) has long provided road weather services. Now, the CoMoSeF (Cooperative Mobility Services of the Future) project has been developing communication methodologies to deliver road weather services directly to vehicles and g
  • June 24, 2021
    Ukraine invests in Kistler WiM
    Eastern European nation will use Kistler WiM stations to tackle overloaded trucks
  • February 2, 2012
    Land of ITS opportunities
    Geographically, Russia, the largest country in the world, is vast. So too are the opportunities for the global ITS community, which is why ITS Russia has been actively promoting the country and the opportunities that abound there. ITS Russia is reaching out around the world. In October, at the 17th ITS World Congress in Busan, South Korea, a cooperative agreement was signed with ITS America to promote and strengthen research, educational, and commercial cooperation in the ITS field among the two association