Skip to main content

Hikvision unveils 'all in one' ITS camera

Unit works with a tracking radar to monitor up to three lanes of traffic 
By Ben Spencer February 9, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Hikvision says the camera's GMOS sensor ensures brighter images in challenging lighting conditions (© Hikvision)

Hikvision has launched a camera which it says encompasses speed detection, traffic violation, automated plate recognition and vehicle attribute analysis in one housing. 

The company says its Hikvision All-Rounder ITS Camera is suitable for urban roads, highways, tunnels and toll stations. 

Frank Zhang, president of international product and solution centre at Hikvision, says: “Beyond the visual range that is perceived by video cameras, the abilities to understand other kinds of senses would allow even more precise monitoring and reporting of events or accidents.”

The product provides an HD camera, speed radar and light array. 

Hikvision insists it works with a multi-tracking radar that continuously monitors up to two or three traffic lanes, and identifies the speed and position of objects in the monitored area at a speed of up to 300 km/h. 

If a vehicle violates the speed limit, the embedded radar triggers the connected camera and a picture is taken of the vehicle and its number plate.

The camera is expected to respond to infringements of traffic rules such as wrong-way driving, improper lane use or failure to use a seatbelt by capturing images of the vehicle and recognising its number plate. 

According to Hikvision, the GMOS (genetically modified organisms) sensor further ensures brighter and smoother images to be reproduced in challenging lighting conditions, especially in low-light environments.

Hikvision claims the camera's embedded supplemental light features a 16-bead light array, offering an IR range of up to 40m at night.

It offers less cabling for easier installation and supports flexible pole or side-mounting. 
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Automating enforcement of environmental zones
    July 27, 2012
    Amsterdam City Council has chosen to move away from manual enforcement of its environmental zone, which is intended to keep highly polluting goods vehicles out of the city centre, and is installing an automated, ANPR-based system. The signs are not much to look at: white with a red circle and the all-important word Milieuzone ('Environmental zone'). But these signs mean that Amsterdam's city centre is strictly off-limits to polluting goods traffic. At the moment compliance is monitored by special wardens wh
  • Q-Free sees logic in video tolling
    September 15, 2014
    Q-Free’s Frank Kjelsli talks to Colin Sowman about why video tolling could be the boost to efficiency and interoperability the industry is seeking. Like it or not, the principal of one person, one tolling account is likely to become a reality: be that in America with the 2016 interoperability deadline or the European EETS requirement. Multi-tag readers are being introduced and alliances are being formed to meet legislative requirements but as the debate continues about which systems and protocols to adopt,
  • ITS homes in on cycling safety
    April 9, 2014
    A new generation of ITS equipment is helping road authorities get to grips with cycle safety – and not a moment too soon as Colin Sowman discovers. Cyclists - remember them? Apparently not. At least not according to the OECD 2013 report Cycling, Health and Safety which contains the statement: ‘Cyclists are often forgotten in the design of the road traffic system’. Looking through the statistics that exist (each country appears to compile them differently) it is not difficult to see how such a conclusion cou
  • Non-intrusive red light enforcement with true secondary speed verification
    December 4, 2013
    REDFLEXred radar, the latest red light and speed enforcement system from Redflex, utilises non-intrusive mapping radar technology and is said to be the first enforcement system to feature true secondary speed verification capability. REDFLEXred radar tracks the position and speed of up to thirty vehicles at an intersection simultaneously and records two independent speed measurements for every vehicle detected and automatically verifies that they are within the allowable tolerance. It also provides addit