Skip to main content

UK city upgrades urban traffic control

UK infrastructure services provider Amey, which works in partnership with Birmingham City Council to run the highways maintenance service in the city, has placed an order with Siemens for an upgrade to the latest PC Scoot urban traffic control (UTC) system. The existing analogue data transmission system will be replaced with the latest UTMC compliant UG405 outstations installed in tandem with a new internet protocol (IP) communications network on behalf of Amey as part of their UTMC upgrade project in Birmi
July 5, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
UK infrastructure services provider 6110 Amey, which works in partnership with Birmingham City Council to run the highways maintenance service in the city, has placed an order with 189 Siemens for an upgrade to the latest PC Scoot urban traffic control (UTC) system. The existing analogue data transmission system will be replaced with the latest UTMC compliant UG405 outstations installed in tandem with a new internet protocol (IP) communications network on behalf of Amey as part of their UTMC upgrade project in Birmingham, in the UK.

According to John Sunderland, Amey business director, “The Siemens technical proposal offers Amey the most cost effective solution to help us deliver a fully compliant UTMC system as part of our highways maintenance and management service contract with the city of Birmingham.”

Siemens’ product sales manager, Gary Cox, says the project will provide Birmingham with a long term and sustainable intelligent traffic solution that will significantly reduce the on-going cost of operating the system.

Siemens PC Scoot will provide adaptive traffic control at more than 300 locations across the city’s network. As part of the contract, the company will supply and install the latest UG405 data transmission units in both new and existing traffic signal sites at the same time as wireless communications equipment at traffic signal, sign and CCTV locations as part of the UTMC upgrade project.

The introduction of the Siemens UTMC OTUs and associated instation components will offer improved network management and provide flexibility in communications options through the use of lower-cost IP communications links or sharing existing IP communications infrastructure. Additional system benefits include an enhanced web-based user-friendly interface enabling easy access to all OTU features from the instation and full integration of four Mova 6 streams which may be activated either manually or automatically from the UTC instation.

The Birmingham highways maintenance and management service contract to manage and maintain the city’s roads over the next 25 years began in June 2010. The contract will see a huge investment into the city’s road network and Amey is working in partnership with Birmingham City Council to deliver the contract. The works include refurbishment and improvement of the city’s roads, footways, bridges, tunnels, street lighting and traffic control systems. Across the city, this includes 2,500km of road network, 100,000 street lights, 76,000 trees, 850 highway structures and bridges.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • San Francisco to trial ‘smart’ street lighting controls
    January 21, 2014
    San Francisco’s Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC) is to trial a ‘smart’ street lighting central management system, (CMS) developed by UK-based smart street lighting company Telensa. The SFPUC owns, operates and maintains over half the city’s street lights and recently announced a project to replace its high pressure sodium cobra-head style light fixtures with ultra-efficient light emitting diodes (LED) luminaires. Telensa’s PLANet (Public Lighting Active Network) street light central management sys
  • Siqura product additions
    February 6, 2012
    Optelecom-NKF has announced the release of its multi-codec Siqura S-60 D-MC decoder and the eight-channel A-80 audio and I/O card. The Siqura S-60 D-MC can automatically recognise and decompress MPEG2, MPEG4 and H.264 into excellent quality images for analogue viewing with very little latency. Through a user-friendly Web interface, it is possible to configure an array of features, ranging from serial data streams to duplex audio and I/O contacts over IP. With an optional SFP slot option, it is possible t
  • Chubb launches new camera system for smart motorways
    August 8, 2017
    Chubb Systems has launched a television outstation (TVOS) and an all-weather traffic monitoring CCTV camera system that it says delivers the high quality images demanded by smart motorways. The unit comprises a long-range, high-resolution camera with optical zoom and back light compensation, an infrared array with 500m range, and a television base unit (TVBU). The system’s infrared array enables the TVOS to deliver images in zero light conditions to monitor traffic flow and motorway incidents as well as inc
  • Progressing work zone safety systems
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford investigates progress in a key safety area - work zones. Highway construction zone safety is taken seriously enough in the US to merit a special spring National Work Zone Awareness Week, which in 2010 ran from 19-23 April. Headed by the US Department of Transportation's Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), this aims to reduce an annual toll of work zone deaths - 720 in 2008 (an average of one every 10 hours) with more than 40,000 traffic injuries (an average of one every 13 minutes).