Skip to main content

Simmonite numbering scheme set for UK

New national scheme for traffic signal controllers named after JCT signals pioneer
By David Arminas January 10, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The idea is that every signal-controlled site in the country can be uniquely identified (© Martinlee58 | Dreamstime.com)

Brian Simmonite, founder of UK signals consultancy company JCT, will have his name associated with a national numbering scheme for traffic signal controllers.

A new UK national numbering scheme for traffic signal controllers will be called the “Simmonite Number” in honour of one of the pioneers of signal control.

The Brian Simmonite numbering system is part of the Digital Controller Interface Specification, DCIS. Simmonite, who died in 2009 aged just 55, was founder of signals consultancy company JCT.

The Simmonite Number will be an additional national unique identifier for traffic signals that sit on top of the current locally derived ‘SCN’ or Site Controller Numbers that road authorities will still use for managing their signals.

It has been introduced thanks to work undertaken through the UK’s Transport Technology Forum’s connected vehicles and UTMC working groups and will help to digitise the UK’s road network. This will set an open and standard way of numbering signal sites. It is also the first step to digitising each controller’s specific control configuration and will eventually ensure that every signal-controlled site in the country can be uniquely identified.

Starting this year, the DCIS project team will contact road authorities to trial the application of Simmonite Numbers to their signals.

Brian Simmonite’s nearly 30-year career included stints with traffic signals at England’s Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire County Councils. He later developed the LinSig design and assessment tool for traffic signal junctions and urban networks.

Simmonite 'would be honoured' (image: JCT)

“Brian would be honoured at having his name associated with something that makes signals more efficient,” said Paul Moore, managing director of JCT. Moore joined Simmonite in 1996 to co-write LinSig for Windows, which has become an industry standard in the UK.

UTMC is a UK-based initiative which provides traffic managers with open technical specifications, supporting an innovative competitive marketplace and helping systems interwork effectively. All the work is undertaken cooperatively with both public highways authorities and the systems industry. It aims to provide practical help, avoiding excessive complexity in favour of simple and agreed approaches.

Initiated in the early 1990s by the UK Department for Transport, UTMC is now the de facto UK standard for traffic-related ITS. The majority of UK local authorities have a UTMC core to their systems.

Related Content

  • UK city to introduce thermal imaging traffic management
    March 24, 2016
    City of York Council is to introduce thermal imaging technology on key cycle routes in York to help reduce the time spent at traffic signals, improve journey reliability and cycle safety. The city is set to become one of the first councils in the country to start using the technology which will accurately detect cyclists at signals by their ‘heat signature’, allowing the signals to react accordingly and be adjusted to give more ‘green time’ for cyclists. The thermal technology was first introduced by
  • Opinion: With e-scooters sharing is caring
    April 25, 2022
    Micromobility use is expanding: Voi’s Matthew Pencharz explains why lawmakers need to catch up with the growth of e-scooters in particular and the implications for safety
  • Transition time for mobility in Hamburg
    June 11, 2025
    The City of Hamburg – host of the UITP Summit 2025 – has been working with PTV Group to make the most of technology to enhance urban mobility, and reach climate goals…
  • Sustainable mobility: innovative solutions needed to reduce traffic emissions
    May 1, 2021
    Kapsch TrafficCom’s Mobility Report 2021 reveals how new ITS measures such as vehicle connectivity and AI-based data processing can help create joined-up traffic management