Skip to main content

Indra gets on board Cairo monorail

Group will provide ticketing technology and access control for Egypt's new transit system
By Adam Hill June 1, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
The lines can transport 45,000 people per hour in each direction (© Tamer Adel | Dreamstime.com)

Indra has been awarded a contract to implement its ticketing technology in Cairo's two-line monorail system.

Indra's remit will be design, develop and supply automatic ticket vending machines, ticketing systems and access control systems from its Mova Collect portfolio, based on both contactless card and QR code and mobile phone technologies - for the first time in Egypt.

These will cover the 22 stations on the line linking East Cairo to the future New Administrative Capital and at the 12 stations on the line between 6th of October City and Giza.

The lines can transport 45,000 people per hour in each direction; 20 million people live in Greater Cairo, the largest urban area in Africa.

Indra says its contactless technology "will facilitate fast, comfortable and easy access to the monorail for travellers". 

It will maintain the control centre, equipped with its back office technology, to centralise and integrate all operations and sales modules, "in order to provide the operator with greater control, secure access to information and flexibility to adapt to the needs and users' habits", the company says.

" All this will make it possible to offer the highest quality of service to travellers, reduce fraud and minimise the cost of operating and maintaining the systems."

Indra already has the contract for access control and automatic fare collection technology for Cairo Metro lines 1 and 2, which have been in operation since 2013,including maintenance until 2024.

It is currently developing systems for ticket sales and access control in the new public transport system being created in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and has implemented its ticketing technology on the Mecca–Medina high-speed railway.

The group also has ticketing contracts on the metros and trains of Madrid, Barcelona, Amsterdam, Lisbon, Santiago de Chile, Riyadh, Mumbai, St Louis, Buenos Aires and Mexico City.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Siemens, Thales land Spanish train deal
    November 25, 2014
    Spanish administrator of railway infrastructures, Adif, has awarded the Thales/Siemens joint venture a contract for the installation of traffic control, automatic train protection, telecommunications and safety technologies on the Olmedo-Ourense high-speed line section, together with maintenance over a 20-year period. The amount of the contract is US$637 million. Thales is to install the European Railway Traffic Management System (ERTMS) Level 2 automatic train protection system, wayside LED light signal
  • Littlepay helps California buses go contactless
    August 5, 2021
    Littlepay is also enabling tap to ride in the Portuguese city of Porto
  • First e-ticketing contract in France for Hoeft & Wessel
    September 11, 2012
    German headquartered Hoeft & Wessel has received an order for the Almex e-ticketing system from French bus company Les Cars Air France, operated by Aérolis, a joint subsidiary of Keolis and Air France, to be installed on buses operating between Paris Charles-de-Gaulle and Paris Orly and the city of Paris. The order, the first in France for Hoeft & Wessel, comprises a total of 55 on-board ticket vending terminals with ticket printers, together with application software and integration into the back-office sy
  • Indra supervises 9km tunnel in Columbia
    September 3, 2019
    Indra and engineering firm Eléctricas de Medellín Ingeniería y Servicios has commissioned a control centre and a back-up centre to supervise a 9km tunnel in Columbia. Both centres will monitor the safety and revenue collection systems of the Túnel de Oriente, which serves as a transport link between the city of Medellín and José María Córdoba airport. It is part of Concesión Túnel Aburrá Oriente, a 24km road corridor that Indra is now managing via its Mova solutions. Indra says its toll solution Mova C