Skip to main content

TrafficLand to host and distribute live video from Michigan traffic cameras

US live traffic video aggregator TrafficLand is working with the City of Battle Creek, Michigan to host and distribute video from the city’s roadside traffic cameras. TrafficLand will provide live video from the Battle Creek cameras to its public information website and other services.
June 16, 2015 Read time: 1 min

US live traffic video aggregator 1964 TrafficLand is working with the City of Battle Creek, Michigan to host and distribute video from the city’s roadside traffic cameras.  TrafficLand will provide live video from the Battle Creek cameras to its public information website and other services.

TrafficLand will also integrate the video into its national network footprint of over 20,000 traffic cameras, expanding the availability of the Battle Creek video to media, first responders, connected device users and others through the company’s API and other specialised services.

“We are very happy to be working with the City of Battle Creek on behalf of the public,” said Lawrence Nelson, CEO of TrafficLand.  “Over the past 12 years, TrafficLand has built strong working relationships with over 50 transportation agencies.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Close shave for Brazilian project
    June 12, 2015
    Signing the order to equip a new control room just 45 days before the city hosts a major sporting event is challenging - but some deadlines just cannot be moved. There is nothing like a deadline to concentrate minds and effort as Mitsubishi and the Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte discovered in the run-up to the 2014 World Cup. Although municipal authorities had been considering a new command centre for years, it was the hosting of the World Cup last summer that provided the final impetus.
  • Machine vision - cameras for intelligent traffic management
    January 25, 2012
    For some, machine vision is the coming technology. For others, it’s already here. Although it remains a relative newcomer to the ITS sector, its effects look set to be profound and far-reaching. Encapsulating in just a few short words the distinguishing features of complex technologies and their operating concepts can sometimes be difficult. Often, it is the most subtle of nuances which are both the most important and yet also the most easily lost. Happily, in the case of machine vision this isn’t the case:
  • Developing a wireless cooperative traffic management system
    March 14, 2012
    The use by MDOT of 90-foot concrete poles on which to mount CCTV equipment reduces the number of poles needed to monitor a given area and incidences of occlusion
  • Why integrated traffic management needs a cohesive approach
    April 10, 2012
    Traffic control is increasingly being viewed as one essential element of a wider ‘system of systems’ – the smart city. Jason Barnes, Jon Masters and David Crawford report on latest ideas and efforts for making cities ‘smarter’ Virtually every element of the fabric and utilitarian operations that make urban areas tick can now be found somewhere in the mix that is the ‘smart city’ agenda. Ideas have expanded and projects pursued in different directions as the rhetoric on making cities ‘smarter’ has grown. App