Skip to main content

Sustainable traffic management solutions

Siemens's commitment to innovation, energy and cost-saving sustainable solutions is reinforced at Traffex with the latest developments in Extra Low Voltage (ELV) technology, retrofit LED solutions and easy-access roadside equipment.
February 2, 2012 Read time: 1 min
189 Siemens's commitment to innovation, energy and cost-saving sustainable solutions is reinforced at 136 Traffex with the latest developments in Extra Low Voltage (ELV) technology, retrofit LED solutions and easy-access roadside equipment. Further innovations on show at Traffex include Sicore, Siemens's brand-new ANPR camera, and SafeZone, the new average speed enforcement system specifically designed for urban environments.

Related Content

  • Sicore from Siemens
    February 2, 2012
    Sicore is the new-generation ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) camera system designed by Siemens Mobility to read number plates automatically. The company says Sicore caters for a wide range of applications in parking space monitoring and security, vehicle speed and journey time measurement, as well as toll collection. Sicore can scan up to two lanes of traffic and even opposite directions of travel at the same time. The operating range is 5 to 30 metres for single-lane and 10 to 35 metres for two-l
  • Fleet and highway management, WIM, enforcement
    February 2, 2012
    Two Central Weighing Group companies are joining forces at Traffex this year to present a new range of vehicle management solutions. Central Weighing is an established market leader in Weigh In Motion (WIM) solutions for law enforcement and fleet management applications, with over 4,000 installations in over 40 countries. The latest Supaweigh 5000c slow-speed WIM, designed primarily for road tolling applications, will be on display for the first time.
  • Polish city goes for Siemens ANPR
    September 2, 2014
    Siemens has won an order worth more than £656,000 to supply more than 50 Sitraffic Sicore automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras to the city of Bydgoszcz, Poland. The cameras, which Siemens says are capable of recognising more than half a million number plates a day, will be used to monitor traffic in the event of congestion. Commissioning is planned for spring 2015.
  • The cost benefits of LED traffic signals
    July 16, 2012
    On 11 January 2005, the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) began installing GELcore LED traffic signal modules state-wide through an Energy Savings Performance Contract. In tendering for the work, the energy service contractors could choose any manufacturers equipment but all of them proposed to use the GELcore brand.