Skip to main content

UK start-up receives funding for artificial intelligence that could end traffic jams

UK start-up Vivacity Labs, creators of a sensor with in-built machine-learning that can identify individual road users and manage traffic accordingly has secured a total of US$3.8 million (£3 million) in funding, that could pave the way for driverless cars and truly smart cities that can recognise different vehicles and regulate traffic in real-time. The company has secured a US$2.2 million (£1.7 million) project grant from Innovate UK to roll out a city-wide sensor network for the VivaMK project and a str
May 17, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
UK start-up Vivacity Labs, creators of a sensor with in-built machine-learning that can identify individual road users and manage traffic accordingly has secured a total of US$3.8 million (£3 million) in funding, that could pave the way for driverless cars and truly smart cities that can recognise different vehicles and regulate traffic in real-time.

The company has secured a US$2.2 million (£1.7 million) project grant from Innovate UK to roll out a city-wide sensor network for the VivaMK project and a strategic investment of US$2 million (£1.6 million) from Tracsis, Downing Ventures and the London Co-Investment Fund.

The VivaMK project, part of Innovate UK’s Smart Cities initiative, will see Vivacity Labs deploy 2,500 of its sensors across 50 square miles of Milton Keynes, monitoring all major junction points and car parking spaces. This is the first step in creating an intelligent traffic management system that avoids bottlenecks and improves safety by influencing traffic movement as it happens, based on the type of traffic and monitoring the areas where it becomes congested. The first 12 months of the project will involve installation of the sensors and subsequent data gathering (expected to start in September), followed by integration into traffic management systems.

The cameras will also allow future traffic lights to give priority at signalled intersections to cyclists, buses or ambulances. Vehicle dashboards that communicate with traffic lights could also flag the presence of cyclists to lorry drivers. The technology could also improve safety for pedestrians by enabling traffic signals to communicate with driverless cars and inform them if pedestrians are crossing the road.

Vivacity Labs’ systems will also allow Tracsis to create a much more efficient traffic management system by replacing manual image processing with cameras that have built-in AI technology.

Related Content

  • April 27, 2015
    UK city pilots I2V technology
    New technology which communicates between traffic signals and motorists to help the way they drive is being rolled out across Newcastle as part of a joint cooperative project with Siemens. In the first pilot of its kind in the UK, the system links an in-vehicle communication system directly with the city’s urban traffic management centre (UTMC), the infrastructure will ‘communicate’ directly with motorists, giving certain vehicles priority at junctions. Initially, the system has been fitted to non-emerge
  • June 28, 2018
    Harnessing the power of smart technology
    Keeping the public safe in a changing world requires smart thinking and sensible deployment of technology. Peter Jones of Hitachi Europe examines some available options From human threats, such as terrorism, to digital threats like hacking, the growing sophistication of crime is posing serious challenges to public safety. At the same time, mass urbanisation threatens to exacerbate these problems as there are more people to keep safe. According to a new whitepaper from Hitachi and Frost & Sullivan, Public
  • October 4, 2013
    UK major road set to become internet-connected highway
    A partnership of the UK’s department for Transport (DfT), British telecom (BT) and Cambridge-based wireless firm Neul is working on a project to transform the A14 between Felixstowe and Birmingham into the country’s first internet-connected road. The smart road, which aims to prepare the country for future technology from wireless toll chargers to automated cars, will include a network of sensors along an eighty-kilometre stretch, with data transmitted over white space, temporarily unused gaps in the dig
  • April 18, 2024
    Iteris gets $9.6m green light in Orange County
    Signal timing design, operations & maintenance are on agenda in US state of California