Skip to main content

First ScotRail unveils smartcard plan

In the UK, rail operator First ScotRail plans to install 140 smartcard validation machines across seventy of the 350 stations in Scotland, focusing on the Aberdeen, Stirling and Strathclyde areas. The technology was installed in twenty-seven stations at the end of 2012, and should be implemented in the remaining stations in the next three months. Building on a pilot scheme for annual season-ticket holders that has been running between Edinburgh and Glasgow on the line through Falkirk since 2011, the move wi
January 9, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
In the UK, rail operator First 7078 ScotRail plans to install 140 smartcard validation machines across seventy of the 350 stations in Scotland, focusing on the Aberdeen, Stirling and Strathclyde areas.

The technology was installed in twenty-seven stations at the end of 2012, and should be implemented in the remaining stations in the next three months.

Building on a pilot scheme for annual season-ticket holders that has been running between Edinburgh and Glasgow on the line through Falkirk since 2011, the move will mean that the stations will have the same integrated transport smartcard organisation technology installed in most of the country's buses.

Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon revealed a so-called Saltire card vision in October, which the 2112 Scottish Government envisages would work in the same way as the Oyster card in London, with the eventual aim of smartcards being used on all journeys by train, bus, subway, tram and ferry in Scotland.

First Group has a duty to roll out a smartcard service as part of its seven-year ScotRail franchise, which is due for renewal this year. However, the service is at least a year behind the target the company publicly set itself in 2009 and it is not yet clear when the service will be expanded to the rest of the rail network.

Together with a two-year contract to manage the service, this stage of the project is expected to cost Aberdeen-based First Group up to US$1.3 million. The Glasgow-Edinburgh pilot is being managed by Japanese group, 5163 Fujitsu.

A spokesman for First Group said: "All seventy stations will have the validators by 31 March this year. They will be operational on dates to be announced in due course."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Manchester extends Metrolink tap and go to trams and buses
    March 4, 2025
    UK city will soon have integrated payment in same way as capital London
  • Blackpool tramway reaches five million passengers
    March 2, 2017
    Blackpool’s revamped tramway system is proving popular than ever, with ticket sales showing that five million journeys have been recorded so far since April 2016, building on the increases in passenger journeys since the tramway re-opened in 2012 and topping the five million passengers mark for the first time since 1994.
  • Test phase of Adelaide contactless ticketing under way
    October 5, 2012
    The 1.1 million inhabitants of Adelaide, Australia, will shortly start reaping the benefits of a Xerox contactless ticketing system on the city’s network of 1000 buses, 26 trams and 130 railcars. In the test phase, seventy vehicles equipped with mixed ticketing consoles and validators are serving the Adelaide Hills area, where ticket office and retailer machines have already been installed. "This partial deployment represents less than 10% of the project equipment, but calls on almost all of the functions o
  • Modernising India's bus travel
    August 29, 2012
    Award-winning ITS initiatives are promising modernisation of bus travel as a key part of development plans for cities of the Indian state of Karnataka. The Indian state of Karnataka is poised to launch the next stage of a major rollout of ITS technology on its bus network following the August 2012 go-live of an award-winning passenger information system. The Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC), which is owned by the state government