Skip to main content

Swarco’s vehicle-activated warning signs alert drivers to a cyclist ahead

January 15, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Swarco cyclist sign

Swarco Traffic has created a ‘bicycle-ahead’ warning system for drivers on busy country lanes in the English county of Bedfordshire.      

 Central Bedfordshire Council wanted to improve protection for cyclists and encourage safer cycling on its rural roads where there is often limited visibility. It turned to local engineering contractor Jacobs Engineering and Swarco to provide the solution.

“Jacobs asked us to design a scheme that would detect a cyclist in the lanes and alert motorists to their presence,” said Paul Wright, technical estimator at Swarco UK and who had the responsibility for designing the solution. “The lanes leave both cyclists and motorists blind to one another, with high hedges that make it difficult to see the road ahead.”

The Swarco-engineered solution uses vehicle-activated signs at each end of a defined detection zone, with each zone being around 750m in length. When a cyclist passes into the zone, a signal is sent from an AGD 318 traffic control radar to the signs at either end of the zone. The signs illuminate to warn approaching drivers travelling above a pre-set speed threshold that a cyclist is in the area.

The signs also display a warning message advising drivers to reduce their speed.

The fully solar-powered solution enables real-time information updates and status reports to be accessed. This includes information on power, communication and fault detection to ensure the safety critical signs remain at optimum capacity.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cost benefit: Wichita eases workzone congestion
    July 8, 2019
    Achieving higher diversion rates has helped one Kansas city to make traffic flow more efficient around workzones. David Crawford examines what’s behind a 10:1 benefit-to-cost ratio in Wichita Around 10% of highway congestion in the US results from delays in workzones, leading to an estimated annual loss of $700 million in fuel costs alone. The lack of accessible real-time traffic information to help motorists minimise their inconvenience – particularly at peak times - is a major contributor. One solut
  • New services and equipment helps cities tackle air quality issues
    September 19, 2017
    With poor urban air quality shortening lives and fines being imposed for breaching pollution limits, authorities are seeking ways to clean up their cities. Poor air quality is topping the agenda for city authorities across the globe. In the UK, for example, a report from the Royal Colleges of Physicians and of Paediatrics and Child Health, concluded that poor outdoor air quality shortens the lives of around 40,000 people a year – principally by undermining the health of people with heart and/or lung prob
  • Knowing when to slow down
    August 8, 2018
    Level 2 driver assistance vehicles have little problem reading fixed metal signs at the roadside - but it’s a different story with VMS in tunnels, finds Alan Dron. Following a series of hands-free driving tests in tunnels, an Australian road authority believes that car manufacturers have to up their game before vehicles have the required levels of competence to consistently perform ‘assisted driving’ tasks. The trials, in the state of Victoria late last year, tested the ability of several vehicles to stay
  • Connected offers free I2V connectivity
    November 1, 2016
    A new system could reduce the cost of implementing I2V communications across a city to less than that for a single intersection, as Colin Sowman hears. It may seem too good to be true but US company Connected Signals is offering city authorities the equipment to provide infrastructure to vehicle (I2V) communications for free. The system enables drivers to receive information about the timing of signals they are approaching via the EnLighten smartphone app (or connected in-vehicle display).