Skip to main content

IBM brings Smart Cities Initiative to São Paulo

IBM announced the opening of a new information control centre in São Paulo, Brazil, capturing, linking and unifying data from 19 TMCs across the state–an area that includes 4,000 miles of state highways serving a population of 20 million people in 271 cities.
September 9, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
ITSWC 2014 Master Avatar
62 IBM announced the opening of a new information control centre in São Paulo, Brazil, capturing, linking and unifying data from 19 TMCs across the state–an area that includes 4,000 miles of state highways serving a population of 20 million people in 271 cities.

According to Eric-Mark Huitema, global smarter transportation leader for IBM Smart Cities initiative, the centre will help the Agencia de Transporte do Estado de Sao Paulo (ARTESP) improve supervision of the state’s highways by unifying traffic data, incident management and service delivery through the use of advanced analytics.

“The information control centre for the state will be able to oversee São Paulo’s highways in near real time. With IBM technology in place we will now have the right tools to check quality of services provided by each administrator and also the corresponding contract fulfillment,” ARTESP general director Karla Bertocco Trindade said in a statement.

In addition to data from each administrator’s control centres, which receive information through sensors, weather stations, call-boxes and other connected devices, the state’s central information control centre will now be able to centralise new data streams such as traffic reports and revenue data from toll plazas.

IBM is also demonstrating a new intelligent commerce app that can be used by car dealerships to give potential customers a virtual tour of various models in an interactive experience. It’s especially suited for small dealerships with limited floor space as well as kiosks in shopping malls. The app allows users to toggle between multiple vehicle models and explore options on a flat screen TV.

Sensors detect customers’ movements and allow them to virtually walk around a car, change its colour, add options and even open the door, sit in the driver’s seat and turn on the ignition to hear the roar of the engine. The app is being used by six Jaguar Land Rover dealerships in Europe and Asia.

Booth 2023
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 66977 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.ibm.com </span> IBM Website true /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=66977 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sensys notches up sales success
    March 24, 2014
    Swedish-headquartered Sensys Traffic is looking forward to a very successful Intertraffic event. On the basis that success breeds success, in just the last few weeks alone, the company has notched up important sales. Sensys has received sub-orders worth over €9.5 million from the Swedish Transport Administration to supply measurement systems and measurement cabinets for traffic safety cameras for the Swedish ATC system, with indications of further business volume in the forthcoming years. Earlier this month
  • Aesys demonstrates ultra low power VMS and LED parking signs
    March 3, 2014
    Aesys, a specialist in the LED display industry, will be using Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to highlight its range of traffic variable message signs (VMS) with ULP Technology. The company claims ULP (ultra low power) is the best existing technology for low consumption applications. It enables high efficiency LEDs with ULP piloting, power supplies with low dispersion, optimised electronic control, heat dissipation without external air exchange and high thermal dissipation paint. In addition, the company says
  • Aimsun Online in award-winning San Diego ICM project
    February 21, 2014
    The Aimsun Online real-time decision support system for traffic management will take centre stage at the TSS-Transport Simulation Systems stand. Its dynamic, high-speed simulation of large areas allows traffic operators to accurately forecast the future network flow patterns that will result from a particular traffic management or information provision strategy.
  • Washington Post game highlights AV flaws
    September 11, 2019
    Mind the kangaroos! That is among the more surprising suggestions in a new entertainment which purports to illustrate the pitfalls of autonomous vehicles (AVs). US media giant The Washington Post has created a short interactive game which “shows readers how autonomous cars function and breaks down the technology to educate viewers about their limitations and challenges”. These include sensor blind spots and confusion over what other road users are about to do. The five-minute game takes the form of a jou