Skip to main content

Q-Free blooms in Brisbane active travel count project

Counting units are linked with traffic displays on path near Australian city's Botanic Gardens
By Adam Hill September 26, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The overpass provides a safe route for cyclists and pedestrians to Brisbane's Botanic Gardens (© Alexander Cimbal | Dreamstime.com)

Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads has chosen Q-Free to work on a cycling and walking counter display trial in Brisbane, Australia. 

The four-month trial will measure and monitor the number of people using active transport routes on a path along Canon Garland Overpass in Toowong. 

The elevated route over the Western Freeway links Toowong’s Anzac Park with Brisbane Botanic Gardens at Mt Coot-tha.

Q-Free’s Hi-Trac CMU monitoring units will be integrated into the local traffic control network. They will detect cyclists and communicate with warning signs and traffic signals to improve safety for all road users.

Q-Free Asia and Pacific vice president Silje Troseth says: "Cycling has many benefits, from personal health to sustainability and environmental health, so promoting it aligns with Q-Free’s values.”

The units use Q-Free's Kinetic Counts software, part of the Kinetic Mobility platform, to detect bicycles from other vehicles or pedestrians, and generates real-time usage data which it communicates with Kinetic Signs software. 

Daily and year-to-date data, plus details such as current time, temperature, words of encouragement, and safety awareness messages are shared with path users on a display.

Hege Sand, Q-Free EVP of sustainability, people and brand, says: "Active transport improves our health through exercise while at the same time reducing emissions. We build technology to make active transport and mixed-use roads safer and better for everyone.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Intertraffic Amsterdam date for Kistler bridge monitoring portfolio
    February 29, 2024
    Kistler is also bringing its new KiTraffic Digital Platform WiM system to Amsterdam in April
  • Iteris introduces SmartCycle and Vantage Vector Hybrid
    April 5, 2016
    Iteris is using Intertraffic to introduce two important safety innovations. The first is a new video-based bicycle detection system, SmartCycle, which the company says has the unique capability of distinguishing bicycles from other vehicles on the road in any lane. This process provides a special output that is sent to the traffic controller to extend the green time when bicycles are detected, allowing them to safely cross the intersection before the light changes. “Cycling is a way of life in Amsterd
  • Monitoring during construction reveals benefits of new expressway
    June 6, 2014
    David Crawford reports on how the authorities in New Zealand are using Bluetooth technology to monitor the effects of a new expressway as it is being constructed. New Zealand Highway Agency (NZHA) is using Bluetooth-based vehicle detection to assess the impact of its biggest road building project as the various sections are completed. The large-scale deployment of a Bluetooth-based vehicle detection system is making substantial contributions to traffic data needs in progressing the new Waikato Expressway, a
  • Traffic tech firms: save the planet!
    May 20, 2022
    Kapsch, Yunex and Swarco pen passionate open letter to World Economic Forum delegates