Skip to main content

Upgrade for Northampton’s traffic management

An extensive traffic management systems upgrade is under way in Northamptonshire, where UK company Siemens is supplying Northamptonshire County Council with the latest PC SCOOT urban traffic control system and the recently-launched Siemens InView hosted fault management solution. Subsequent phases of the upgrade will see the existing analogue TC12 outstations replaced by the latest Siemens UTMC compliant UG405 outstations and ultimately the migration to a new hosted traffic management service solution. In
October 4, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
An extensive traffic management systems upgrade is under way in Northamptonshire, where UK company 189 Siemens is supplying Northamptonshire County Council with the latest PC SCOOT urban traffic control system and the recently-launched Siemens InView hosted fault management solution. 

Subsequent phases of the upgrade will see the existing analogue TC12 outstations replaced by the latest Siemens UTMC compliant UG405 outstations and ultimately the migration to a new hosted traffic management service solution.

In addition to upgrading to IP communications using ADSL circuits, the contract also covers the maintenance of traffic equipment at approximately 150 junctions and 230 pedestrian crossings for the next four years.

The contract was awarded to Siemens on behalf of the council by integrated highways services provider MGWSP, a joint venture between 6665 May Gurney (civil contractors) and 6666 WSP (consultants).

According to Andrew Avallone of MGWSP, the introduction of PC SCOOT allows more cost-effective systems integration and the consistent deployment of hardware across the range of traffic management and control systems. This in turn reduces maintenance requirements and provides more opportunities for implementing a range of traffic control solutions including the introduction of further enhanced features.

He says, “The programme utilises the standard features of Siemens PC SCOOT UTC system tailored to meet the individual requirements for Northamptonshire County Council. This approach provides a platform for the planned outstation upgrades along with the benefits of improved support and reliability, but also allows Northamptonshire to utilise product developments requested from across the wider Siemens systems user groups.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Thales to upgrade New York’s Queens Boulevard subway line
    October 1, 2015
    In a contract worth US$49.6 million from the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), Thales is to upgrade the New York subway’s busy Queens Boulevard Line with its signalling solution. The contract includes the deployment of the Thales’s communications-based train control system, SelTrac CBTC, as well as the supply of equipment for the line’s train fleet. Design work for the Queens Boulevard Line is getting underway and installations are expected to begin in mid-2017.
  • Siemens unveils Sepac 3.51 traffic control software
    July 31, 2012
    At this year’s IMSA (International Municipal Signal Association) Conference, which ends today in Orlando, Florida, Siemens has released the latest Sepac local traffic controller software which incorporates new features that help make intersections safer and improve the use of traffic signal priority for public mass transportation, without interrupting the general traffic flow.
  • Siemens to modernise railway network signalling in Egypt
    April 11, 2016
    Siemens has been awarded a contract by Egyptian National Railways (ENR) to modernise 260km of railway network in Egypt with advanced technology for signalling, level-crossings and communications. The upgrades, which are part of a national plan to modernise Egypt’s rail system, will increase safety levels and allow the railway’s maximum speed to be raised from 140km/h to 160km/h, boosting throughput of passenger trains and freight services. The routes between Benha and Port Said to the north east and Zag
  • Telent signals Yorkshire maintenance win
    May 21, 2021
    Contract involves responding to lamp and detector faults and runs until March 2025