Skip to main content

SRL unveils Wave and Wait pedestrian system

Signals retain push-button functionality for users who are visually impaired
By Ben Spencer February 12, 2021 Read time: 1 min
SRL says pedestrians are alerted to the contactless option by a sign on the stainless steel touch button (© SRL)

SRL has launched a contactless mobile pedestrian system which it says allows people to reduce their contact with surfaces that can carry the coronavirus. 

The UK-based manufacturer's Wave and Wait sensor can be incorporated into its Pedestrian Portable and Pedestrian Temporary signals, along with those within the Urban64 intelligent traffic light solution coordinating multi-directional flows of traffic and pedestrians.

Pedestrians are alerted to the contactless option by a sign on the stainless steel touch button.

The signals simultaneously retain their push-button functionality for the benefit of pedestrians who are visually impaired, the company adds. 

SRL CEO Richard Tredwin says: “The product has already generated considerable interest, and I am confident that, once we’ve left Covid behind, the market for contactless pedestrian systems will continue due to the heightened global awareness of the importance of hygiene.”

Wave and Wait is the latest product SRL has offered to help combat Covid-19. Around 70 of the company’s variable message signs are currently deployed across the UK by councils to promote safety and to direct people to Covid-19 testing sites.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Coronavirus: World Tunnel Congress in Malaysia postponed
    March 2, 2020
    Fears about the spread of coronavirus mean that World Tunnel Congress (WTC) 2020 in Malaysia has been pushed back to the autumn.
  • Progressing work zone safety systems
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford investigates progress in a key safety area - work zones. Highway construction zone safety is taken seriously enough in the US to merit a special spring National Work Zone Awareness Week, which in 2010 ran from 19-23 April. Headed by the US Department of Transportation's Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), this aims to reduce an annual toll of work zone deaths - 720 in 2008 (an average of one every 10 hours) with more than 40,000 traffic injuries (an average of one every 13 minutes).
  • Progressing work zone safety systems
    February 6, 2012
    David Crawford investigates progress in a key safety area - work zones
  • TomTom banishes range anxiety
    March 16, 2021
    High-quality routing and weather information is going to be vital in persuading drivers that electric vehicles will not let them down, thinks TomTom’s Robin van den Berg