Skip to main content

Telent extends TfL signal deal

Maintenance assets include traffic signals, VMS and over-height vehicle detection systems
By David Arminas September 28, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
There have been “some challenges” in London during the pandemic, says Telent (© MNStudio | Dreamstime.com)

Asset management company Telent has been given a year’s extension to its traffic control maintenance contract with Transport for London (TfL)

Under the agreement, which Telent has held since 2014, the company supplies, installs and maintains more than 3,000 traffic control assets for TfL. Assets include traffic signals, variable message signs and over-height vehicle detection systems.

The renewed contract runs in the first instance to 2021, when there could be a further year’s extension, noted Adam Scriven, Telent’s account director of London Surface Communications.

Telent is working with TfL to help the city authority accommodate social distancing following the coronavirus pandemic, explained Nigel Weldon, business development director for Telent’s highways business.

“The recent pandemic has presented some extreme challenges for TfL and working together closely to thoroughly understand those challenges has enabled us to tailor the service that Telent provides to meet TfL’s needs exactly,” he said.

Over the length of the contract, one of the solutions Telent has deployed for TfL is its plug-and-play traffic signal system which drastically reduces time spent on essential traffic signal installation works.

This extension sits alongside Telent’s Transport business’s other maintenance contracts with TfL, the latest of which was awarded in January this year.

That seven-year deal combines maintenance services, system design and upgrade works to TfL’s communications systems across a vast array of environments and sites. These include all London Underground subway stations, depots and operational buildings, TfL office buildings, bus stations, river piers, cycle hire stations and the London Transport museum.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • London transport to get contactless payment
    July 28, 2014
    Millions of customers are set for easier and more convenient journeys from 16 September, when Transport for London (TfL) will introduce contactless payments for all pay as you go customers on the Tube, London Overground, DLR and trams in addition to the capital's buses. The new option means that passengers will no longer be any need to top up Oyster card balances because fares are charged directly to payment card accounts. Contactless payments - credit, debit, charge or pre-paid cards or devices - work i
  • UK city upgrades urban traffic control
    July 5, 2012
    UK infrastructure services provider Amey, which works in partnership with Birmingham City Council to run the highways maintenance service in the city, has placed an order with Siemens for an upgrade to the latest PC Scoot urban traffic control (UTC) system. The existing analogue data transmission system will be replaced with the latest UTMC compliant UG405 outstations installed in tandem with a new internet protocol (IP) communications network on behalf of Amey as part of their UTMC upgrade project in Birmi
  • More maintenance contracts for Siemens
    November 8, 2012
    Siemens has agreed new traffic signal maintenance contracts with four highways authorities in the UK, increasing the company's service cover across the country. The contracts are already under way in Coventry, Nottingham and Warwickshire, and due to start in Solihull shortly. Based on a competitive schedule of rates for a combination of various customer requirements, the contracts will run for five years and cover the maintenance of more than 400 traffic signal junctions, traffic equipment at almost 550 ped
  • Siemens to automate New York’s Queens Boulevard subway
    August 28, 2015
    Siemens has been awarded a US$156 million contract by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) to install communications-based train control (CBTC) on the Queens Boulevard Line, one of the busiest subway lines on the New York City transit system. Siemens is supplying the onboard equipment for a total of 305 trains and installing the wayside signalling technology at seven of eight field locations.