All encompassing, city-wide transport monitoring and control systems are beginning to make their way onto the market, as Colin Sowman hears.     
     
The futuristic vision of cities where everything is connected and operated with maximum efficiency by a gigantic computer remains a distant prospect but related sectors and services are beginning to coalesce: transport monitoring and control for instance. 
     
Traditionally, cities have had a multitude of traffic monitoring, control and enforcement systems – often in distinct activities and/or separate areas. There are drawbacks to this way of working when, for example, a congestion problem solved in one area simply moves to the next area. The mixing of statically timed and adaptive traffic lights is a case in point, as is a problem on the metro leading to increased demand on buses. Now, however, with the latest generation of technology, cities can have a single over-arching system handling all feeds from and to the monitoring and control (and potentially even enforcement) systems. Not only does this single joined-up system approach allow a complete city-wide overview, it also allows operators to drill-down from that overview to view, check and adjust individual component parts of the network. 
     
The first to come to notice was Cross Zlin with its InVipo system which was the overall winner in this year’s Intertraffic  Innovation Awards. Based in the Czech Republic, the company is best known for producing traffic lights, signs and control systems. It describes InVipo as a smart integration and visualisation platform that can be defined as a middleware between on-field technology and end users and operates through a dashboard allowing an over-view or individual services to be selected. 
     
Quite a mouthful, but in effect it collects all the outputs (traffic monitoring and control, parking, VMS signals, public transport and weather stations) and displays the information on a digital city-wide map. 
 
Notifications for incidents, congestion, faults at traffic lights, dead   cameras and so on, can all be prioritised so that the operator is   alerted to the most pressing item(s). Once an incident or fault is   detected and flagged up, the operator can (depending on their clearance   level) drill down into the system to do a re-boot, change the timings  of  traffic lights, pan or tilt cameras and so on. 
     
InVipo   has been piloted in the Turkish city of Izmir and was part of a major   upgrade which included more than 250 new traffic light controllers  (with  traffic detection) and new traffic frameworks for adaptive  control. 
Like-for-like  measurements in sections where equipment was already installed to  provide baseline figures show that travel times were reduced by between  30% to 65%. A prime example is the main city road between city centre  and airport where at peak periods the travel time has been reduced from  44 minutes to 21 by the installation of a new adaptive control system.   Off-peak saving are also significant – a 36% cut to 10 minutes. 
     
But  the scope of the system does not stop there as Izmir has included the  monitoring of on-street parking in InVipo. 
     
The city has more than 1,500  on-street parking spaces fitted with parking sensors (which will  eventually be expanded to 2,000). Occupation is monitored in real-time  via InVipo with each space given a status: green indicates unoccupied,  orange is occupied (and includes parking duration) while occupied with  overstay is displayed in red. 
     
The  city police can access InVipo online to monitor over-stayers and  process penalties. The next step will be a mobile app for drivers, a web  portal and on-street displays with navigation to unoccupied parking  places. Furthermore, the data obtained is available for the municipality  to produce reports and statistics for parking managers as they prepare a  new strategy and rules for on-street parking. 
     
The  city has more than 20 variable message displays which can show travel  times, free parking places (currently for on-street parking only but  this will be implemented for on-street too once all 2,000 bays are  fitted with sensors) or other information. Displays can be individually  adjusted and monitored through InVipo and the information from 11  (eventually 30) road weather stations also feeds into the system meaning  actual weather data is displayed on the map.
 
The  system is pre-programmed to monitor and manage incidents and road   closures. Again, this is not confined to the immediate vicinity of the   incident, but across the city and can be used to display relevant   traffic information on the variable message signs and/or change signal   timings to alleviate congestion caused by the incident. 
     
Izmir   also employs automated speed, red light, parking overstay and   over-height enforcement and currently the number of traffic violation   detected is huge – more than 20,000 each day. As all these systems are   channelled through InVipo, both the municipality and city police have   all the data, detailed information and photo documentation needed to   prosecute violators, plus the system links to the register of licence   plates. The police department is currently certifying the system and   once this is completed prosecutions will start and the number of   violations is expected to reduce significantly.
     
Cross   had supplied a large proportion of Izmir’s traffic control equipment   which simplifies the integration into InVipo. However the system can   take in-feeds from any make of equipment provided it uses a standard   protocol. To emphasise this breath of connectivity, Cross has founded an   independent software subsidiary called Incinity to market the InVipo   system. 
     
Also offering a   ‘smart-city-in-a-box’ system is 
     
As with InVipo,   Cubic can integrate the output from existing detection and monitoring   systems (including cameras, environmental monitors and connected car   data) into STM to provide a complete overview of the network of travel   modes within a city. Within STM there is also the option to deploy   roadside speed and red light cameras and the nature of the configuration   also allows for additional and future transport management inputs to  be  accommodated. 
     
Again,  all  the information is displayed on a single integrated map through  which  control room staff get an overview of all transport modes and  from which  they can control signals, variable message signs and  traveller  information systems and operate dynamic lanes controls. This  integrated  view allows strategic management across multiple modes to  cope with  incidents, congestion and re-occurring problems.
 
 Individual   functions such as tram, bus, taxi, ferry and tunnel  management can be   carried out using STM and it can be connected to a  smart ticketing   system for integrated traveller payment. Beyond the  user interface, the   output can be used to feed public websites and the  data is then stored   to enable city-wide analysis of transport demand  to assist decision   making and planning. 
     
Speaking in Glasgow at the launch of NextTraffic, Cubic Transportation Systems’ president, Matthew Cole, told ITS International:    “We see our role as providing authorities with the technology stack   and  connectivity and allowing government to figure out the policies   they  want to pursue.”
     
He   sees  much of the process becoming increasingly automated, saying: “The   number  of sensors on transportation systems is growing exponentially   and much  of the decision-making process can be derived from machine   learning. All  that can be built into systems and automated to give   operators a choice  of actions along with the cause, effect and timing   of each but that  requires a fundamentally different kind of   technology.”
     
STM  is one   of Cubic’s growing number of cloud-based applications in line  with the   company’s flexible architecture offer. For its cloud-based  systems,   Cubic is increasingly working with Microsoft which has its own  ‘smart   city’ system called Citynext that encompasses many other  government   services, and, according to Cole, makes it a “natural fit”  with Cubic’s   offerings.
     
As  might be   expected, Siemens can also provide ‘smart city’ levels of  overview and   drill-down, tiered access and all the other functionality  an  authority  may wish. However, rather than offering a particular   stand-alone  product it is more a case of adding functionality and  inputs  from  additional or outlying sensors to an existing Siemens  system. This  can  extend beyond road traffic to include parking, trams  and other  modes.   “If a connected device uses an open protocol, or if  we can have  access  to that protocol, then we can operate, check and  adjust it,” says  the  company’s head of system engineering, Michael  Gaertner.  
     
The   company  is also increasingly moving such operations to the cloud and   uses the  operator’s login to set the level of access he or she is   allowed.  Individual systems report through a dashboard display and   warnings and  alerts can be prioritised. Response plans can be   pre-programmed and  all records stored for analysis.
     
According    to Gaertner, the capital cost may be higher than individual or   regional  systems, but the running costs are similar and the additional   outlay is  more than repaid in reduced travel times. So, in the   transport sector  at least, the ‘Smart City may be much closer than you   think. 
    
        
        
        
        



