Skip to main content

Clearview Intelligence reveals success after a year on the TMT2

Clearview Intelligence (Clearview) has confirmed that orders over the past year for its count and classify products and vehicle detection solutions as part of the Crown Commercial Service’s Traffic Management Technology 2 (TMT2) framework have shown a positive increasing trend. It revealed that Highways England has placed the largest order for replacement of legacy National Traffic Information Service monitoring kit.
January 26, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Clearview Intelligence (Clearview) has confirmed that orders over the past year for its count and classify products and vehicle detection solutions as part of the Crown Commercial Service’s Traffic Management Technology 2 (TMT2) framework have shown a positive increasing trend. It revealed that 8101 Highways England has placed the largest order for replacement of legacy National Traffic Information Service monitoring kit.


Traffic Management Unit and Traffic Appraisal and Economics kits can now be replaced with TMU2 traffic monitoring units which are said to provide an improved system and data availability.

Additionally, public sector organisations including devolved administrations, local transport authorities and 1466 Transport for London can also use the NEC3 suite of contracts to procure products and services through TMT2 Lots 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 13, 14 & 15.

Nick Lanigan, managing director of Clearview, said: “The original intent of being on the framework was to open up opportunities to extend existing collaborations and create strong new relationships with key delivery partners and operators. This is clearly what has been happening and we are very pleased with the first year’s orders and look forward to further strengthening the use of the TMT2 framework as a primary ordering channel in 2018”.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • England’s first motorway celebrates 60th birthday with ITS upgrade
    December 5, 2018
    Sixty years today, 2,300 drivers drove along an eight-mile section of road in England – the first motorway in the country. Opened in 1958, the Preston bypass – now part of the M6 - only had two lanes in each direction, with no safety barrier in the central reservation. There was also no technology – not even simple electronic signs. Highways England is pledging to celebrate the birthday by completing four upgrades on the M6 by spring 2022. The £900m project will add extra lanes and better technolog
  • ITS America, automakers respond to Rubio-Booker 5.9 GHz spectrum legislation
    June 23, 2014
    The Intelligent Transportation Society of America (ITS America) and US automakers have responded to the announcement on legislation introduced by US Senators Marco Rubio and Cory Booker that would set deadlines on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for developing and publishing a test plan for the use of unlicensed devices in the 5.9 GHz band. The senators introduced S. 2505, the Wi-Fi Innovation Act, legislation to expand unlicensed spectrum use by requiring the Federal Communications Commissio
  • US state of the art workzone safety
    January 25, 2012
    The Texas Transportation Institute's Jerry Ullman talks about the state of the art in work zone safety in the US. Work zones are places where, perhaps more than anywhere else on the road network, mobility and safety are strongly linked. Historically, field crews and contractors wanted vehicles in work zones to be moving as slowly as possible, assuming that made conditions the safest for work crews. We are though starting to see a shift in such thinking with the realisation that excessive delays or slow-down
  • Venkat Sumantran: ‘Smart cities are more hype than reality’
    November 23, 2018
    For all the talk of smart cities, investment in systems lags significantly behind organic expansion in most places. Andrew Stone talks to Venkat Sumantran, who has been looking at how to create a coherent framework which could help authorities answer multiple mobility questions Two megatrends are posing unprecedented challenges to those trying to keep people moving around the world’s urban areas now - and in the years and decades to come. The first is rapid urbanisation. One in six of us lived in urban a