Skip to main content

Kapsch integrates Smart Cities’ mobility

Kapsch TrafficCom will use the 2017 ITS World Congress Montréal to showcase its integrated mobility solutions for the smart cities and connected communities of the future. Visitors to the company’s booth will experience how Kapsch uses intelligent traffic technologies to improve the way people live, work, move, commute, and interact with each other.
September 29, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Kapsch TrafficCom will use the 2017 ITS World Congress Montréal to showcase its integrated mobility solutions for the smart cities and connected communities of the future.


Visitors to the company’s booth will experience how Kapsch uses intelligent traffic technologies to improve the way people live, work, move, commute, and interact with each other.

The company will also introduce its new solution that allows truly orchestrated urban mobility management across all transport modes and stakeholders including citizens and travellers. It connects Mobility-as-a-Service to the entire ITS landscape, optimising mobility in a holistic manner and producing benefits for citizens, mobility operators, and agencies.

Delegates are also invited to join the company’s panel discussion in the Smart City Pavilion at 4:00pm on Tuesday, October 31, to discuss the urban mobility landscape of tomorrow with distinguished industry panelists from government and the private sector.

Finally, the seven startups in the Kapsch “Factory1” ITS startup accelerator will also be present to showcase their proof-of-concept projects. Visitors are invited to exchange their big ideas in the mobility sector with them in the “Startup Innovation” panel at 4:45pm on Tuesday, October 31.

Booth 1501   %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.kapsch.net false http://www.kapsch.net/ false false%>

UTC

Related Content

  • October 23, 2018
    Econolite hires ex-Michigan DoT boss Kirk Steudle
    Econolite has hired one of the best-known names in the ITS industry: Kirk Steudle is joining the company with a remit to fulfil two key roles. Steudle, the former director of Michigan Department of Transportation (MDoT), will be senior vice president, leading Econolite’s Transportation Systems Group and also in charge of CAVita, its connected and autonomous vehicles (C/AV) subsidiary. His responsibilities will include all C/AV projects and large-scale systems projects. Steudle had spent his entire
  • March 25, 2014
    Kapsch adds ATMS expertise with Transdyn acquisition
    Kapsch has added extensive advanced traffic management system (ATMS) expertise to its portfolio by acquiring US company Transdyn. The move matches with the aim of becoming a major global presence in the inter-urban traffic management sector, says Peter Ummenhofer, Kapsch’s head of ITS Business Unit: “Recognising that there were already very mature and capable ATMS solutions out there, we decided to look at what was already available.
  • November 5, 2018
    Ford and Baidu to trial self-driving vehicles in China
    Ford has joined forces with technology company Baidu to test Level 4 self-driving vehicles in China over the next two years. Level 4, established by the SAE International (formerly the US Society of Automotive Engineers), will allow the vehicles to operate without intervention from a human driver. A report by CNBC says Ford’s self-driving vehicles are equipped with Baidu’s autonomous driving system Apollo. The cars are expected to be deployed in on-road tests by the end of 2018. Sherif Marakby, pr
  • July 27, 2016
    Webinar - Smart Decisions, Smarter Cities
    Vidsys is delivering a webinar on Thursday, 4 August at 1000 Pacific time/1300 eastern time, to discuss how data and increased connectivity will enable cities to transform the way we will live, work, and interact with one another. The challenge for cities is to not just gather the data, but to make better use of the data to make more informed decisions, creating actionable intelligence. Smart Cities will need to combine and correlate multiple data streams to provide a more holistic evaluation of the city’s