Skip to main content

Urban takes IoT Control

Urban Node 324 Cellular 'works straight out-of-the-box just like a smartphone'
By David Arminas April 27, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Product enables lights to respond to sudden changes in pedestrian numbers or road traffic (image credit: Urban Control)

Urban Control says it has developed the world’s first plug-and-play IoT LED streetlight luminaire controller that can scale-up to millions of lights.

The company says that the controller, Urban Node 324, is also quick to install and deliver all the benefits of smart city LED street lighting. This includes the ability to precisely control brightness and thus energy consumption and costs, depending on actual local conditions.

They respond to sudden changes in pedestrian numbers or road traffic and can monitor energy consumption in real-time. They also identify and even pre-empt faults and precisely target maintenance crews – again reducing operating costs and unnecessary maintenance.

“Unlike traditional smart city lighting installations that require a specialised network to be built, the Urban Node 324 Cellular works straight out-of-the-box just like a smartphone,” says Miguel Lira, Urban Control’s innovation and development director.

“This makes it commercially and technologically viable for any size installation because it does not require the operator to build their own wireless IoT network or become a wireless IoT network operator themselves. This brings all of the benefits of smart lighting to small clusters of streetlights all the way up to massive, multi-million node capital city-sized installations,” he says. “This is truly a game changer in the smart city streetlighting industry.”

Each Urban Node 324 Cellular city streetlight LED luminaire controller includes the Nordic Semiconductor nRF9160 multi-mode NB-IoT/LTE-M System-in-Package (SiP) and plugs into an industry-standard Zhaga LED lighting socket. They then connect over the local cellular IoT network allowing them to be remotely controlled by any smart city central management system (CMS) based on the common TALQ standard.

The operational simplicity of each Urban Node 324 comes from them being engineered to work via a lightweight-machine-to-machine (LwM2M) platform called ALASKA from IoTerop, an IoT device management and security specialist. This leverages the two most common smart city IoT standards: uCIFI and TALQ. Additionally, it uses state-of-the-art embedded design engineering to minimize on-air bandwidth and get power consumption levels low enough to support battery-powered smart city sensors and devices.

Urban Control provides solutions to make infrastructure assets intelligent. That means streetlights that sense their environment and adapt to citizen’s needs, rail stations that guide people safely to their destination and sensors that monitor the safety and condition of highway assets. The company is part of the DW Windsor Group, a UK lighting manufacturer and innovator that was recently acquired by Luceco, another UK company and which supplies high-efficiency and energy-saving LED luminaires.

Nordic Semiconductor is a semiconductor company specialising in ultra-low power wireless technology for the IoT. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Network Optix deploys Nx Go software in 'Silicon Orchard'
    May 30, 2024
    Curiosity Lab at Peachtree Corners has 5G-connected infrastructure communicating with AVs
  • Sensor technology advances increases ITS opportunities
    March 16, 2016
    Basler’s Enzio Schneider explains why advances in CMOS technology provides new opportunities for vision-based ITS applications. Since the beginning of 2015, or even before, it seems obvious that all roads in vision-based ITS applications lead in one technological direction – CMOS. Initially perceived as a trend in vision technology, it has taken a step towards status as the new benchmark with Sony’s announcement to discontinue their CCD production. CMOS sensor technology has become the future for industrial
  • Siemens switches US city of Manchester to LED street lights
    July 9, 2015
    Siemens is switching 9,000 street lights to LED technology in the US city of Manchester in New Hampshire. Some 4,500 lamps have already been refitted and the work should be completed by the end of September. Siemens will also be responsible for service and maintenance work. Siemens says LED technology reduces power consumption by 60 per cent and will bring the city considerable financial benefits, with annual savings of US$500,000 in terms of energy and maintenance costs such as replacing light bulbs.
  • Machine vision standards definition moves forward with establishment of new forum
    December 3, 2012
    The new Future Standards Forum will homogenise standards develop in the machine vision and partnering sectors. Here, machine vision industry experts discuss developments. By Jason Barnes At the Vision Show, which took place in Stuttgart at the beginning of November, the European Machine Vision Association, the US’s Automated Imaging Association and the Japan Industrial Imaging Association (JIIA) established a joint initiative, the Future Standards Forum (FSF). This, said the EMVA’s President Toni Ventura, a