Skip to main content

More Vivacity sensors for Dartford

Installation is part of UK’s Adept Live Labs trial for traffic management and better road design
By David Arminas February 7, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Transport planners have also used near-miss analysis between vehicles and other vehicles as well as with pedestrians and cyclists to better understand these conflicts (image courtesy Vivacity Labs)

Vivacity Labs is installing more traffic monitoring sensors in Dartford, England as part of a smart city initiative to improve urban road designs.

Working in collaboration with Kent County Council and its maintenance partner Amey, Vivacity is putting in an additional 18 sensors following the successful installation of 32 insight sensors in February last year.

Using the anonymous smart data collected from the original 32 sensors, transport planners have been able to understand how road users interact with transport infrastructure and each other.

The combination of real-time data and predictive algorithms is enabling authorities to identify areas for road layout or infrastructure improvements and ultimately design a better road user experience.

Transport planners have also used near-miss analysis between vehicles and vehicles, pedestrians and cyclists to better understand these conflicts along with the traffic conditions that preceded them. With this knowledge, planners can “design-out” inherent road layout risks.

“As well as helping to make safer communities, these sensors will play their part in delivering our strategic aim of having no deaths on our county’s roads by 2050,” David Brazier, Kent council member for highways and transport.

The latest sensors in Dartford will count and classify the modes of transport using the highways at any given time, as well as monitor the usage and speeds of cars, buses, bicycles and pedestrians.

“Having accurate and detailed data is the key success when it comes to implementing new road schemes and network changes,” said Mark Nicholson, Vivacity Labs co-founder.

The work is part of the Adept Smart Places Live Labs programme, a two-year €27.23 million project funded by the UK’s Department for Transport and supported by project partners SNC-Lavalin’s Atkins business, EY, Kier, 02, Ringway and WSP.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Inrix informs FHWA’s data improvements
    December 19, 2017
    Refinements in the data available from the US Federal Highway Administration will improve road management across America. David Crawford reports. In August 2017, the US Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) issued the first results from an upgraded version of its National Performance Management Research Data Set (NPMRDS). Developed to identify the locations and times of high congestion affecting traffic flows along America’s 259,000km (161,000 mile) national highway system, this is a key resource for sta
  • NPRA uses NovuMind bicycle counter for green transport policy Norway
    December 18, 2017
    Silicon Valley start-up NovuMind has provided its (AI)-powered smart bicycle counter to The Norwegian Public Roads Administration (NPRA) in a project which aims to monitor the number of bicycles on the road and assess the implementation of green transportation policy. The device will has been set up on the side of Prinsens Gate, in Trondheim. The counter uses edge computing where AI capability is built into every single device and is said to achieve an accuracy of 96.4%. Ren Wu, founder and chief
  • Acusensus cameras find more than 800 drivers using phones in five-week trial
    November 21, 2024
    There were also 2,300 incidents of not wearing a seat belt
  • Phoenix rises to the Smart City challenge
    December 10, 2015
    Andrew Bardin Williams looks at the City of Phoenix where voters backed a $30bn plan to revamp its transportation network to cultivate a more connected community. According to a Land Use Institute study, half of all Americans and even more millennials (63%) would like to live in a place where they do not need to use a car very often. The City of Phoenix is putting in place plans to revamp its urban development and transportation policies to meet these changing quality of life perceptions.