Skip to main content

Indra technology deployed to improve Amsterdam’s transportation experience

GVB, the authority operating the municipal public transport network in Amsterdam, has awarded Indra a contract to install more than 130 automatic ticket vending machines at the city’s underground, streetcar and bus network. The technology aims to make it easier for users to purchase tickets within a more simplified system. Indra has confirmed it will implement the solution in less than two years.
January 31, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
GVB, the authority operating the municipal public transport network in Amsterdam, has awarded 509 Indra a contract to install more than 130 automatic ticket vending machines at the city’s underground, streetcar and bus network. The technology aims to make it easier for users to purchase tickets within a more simplified system. Indra has confirmed it will implement the solution in less than two years.


These machines will include units that accept payment in cash with a credit card at underground stations as well as units that only accept credit cards in the underground stations and at streetcar or bus stops. The system is required to meet the rules set for the Dutch ticketing system based on the payment card OV-Chipkaart.

Additionally, the contract includes training, support, monitoring and maintenance services over a seven-year period while also remaining open to new orders that may be required to meet the demand for similar ticketing vending machines. The solution is expected to replace the current system in which tickets can be paid with money on buses and streetcars.

Related Content

  • December 14, 2012
    Contactless payments introduced on London's buses
    Bus passengers in London can now use their use their contactless debit, credit or charge card to touch in on the yellow Oyster card readers and pay the single Oyster fare on any of London's 8,500 buses. Introducing the scheme, Transport for London (TfL) says the new payment option will also be good news for the approximately 36,000 people per day who board a bus and find they have insufficient pay as you go balance on their Oyster to pay for their journey as they will be able to use the other card they may
  • June 14, 2017
    Mexico expands free-flow tolling’s boundaries
    Mexico is implementing one of the world’s largest remote tolling systems backed by Indra’s technology. By Andrew Bardin Williams. Mexico recently implemented one of the largest remote toll systems in the world, covering 4,000km of the country’s public highways. Deployed and maintained by Spanish consulting and technology company Indra, in cooperation with the public utility Caminos y Puentes Federales (CAPUFE), the system allows drivers to pay tolls without stopping by using a TAG electronic device installe
  • April 23, 2024
    Minneapolis-St. Paul’s Go-To gets the Cubic touch
    Contactless fare system is centrepiece of upgrade to transit ticketing in the Twin Cities
  • February 2, 2012
    Carbon finance delivers critical support to mass transit schemes
    David Crawford investigates carbon finance in transport. World Bank carbon finance grants are delivering critical support to major mass transit deployments in emerging and developing economies. Only recently operative in the transport sector, the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM, see panel) is designed to generate additional income streams and improve internal rates of return on projects funded from public- and private-sector sources.