Skip to main content

Iteris focuses on intersection safety with SmartCycle

Iteris is promoting intersection safety and detection here at the ITS World Congress, with two innovative products: SmartCycle and Vantage Vector. SmartCycle is an award-winning and patented bicycle detection system that was first released in 2012. A newly released generation enhances the accuracy and capabilities of the system to detect and differentiate bicycles in unique situations such as bike boxes, lane splitting and other realworld and innovative configurations that are becoming more popular worldwid
October 6, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Adam Lyons (left) and Todd Kreter of Iteris showcase the two products

73 Iteris is promoting intersection safety and detection here at the ITS World Congress, with two innovative products: SmartCycle and Vantage Vector.

SmartCycle is an award-winning and patented bicycle detection system that was first released in 2012. A newly released generation enhances the accuracy and capabilities of the system to detect and differentiate bicycles in unique situations such as bike boxes, lane splitting and other realworld and innovative configurations that are becoming more popular worldwide. In addition to a more accurate and flexible detection algorithm, the system also provides enhancements in handling multiple approaching bicycles and improved bike counting accuracy.

A defining feature of SmartCycle is its ability to differentiate bicycles from vehicles. This process provides a special output that is sent to the traffic controller to extend the green time, allowing the bicyclist to safely cross the intersection before the light changes.

“Making intersections safer for bicyclists is one way agencies can utilise technology to meet their safety goal initiatives such as Vision Zero, Toward Zero Deaths, and the USDOT Mayor’s Challenge,” says Adam J Lyons, Director of Marketing, Roadway Sensors, Iteris.

Iteris will also be highlighting the dilemma zone safety applications of Vantage Vector, the firm’s hybrid radar and video sensor. The dilemma zone is that moment of time when a vehicle is rapidly approaching an intersection but the driver is not sure if he should stop or go because the traffic signal is yellow.

Vantage Vector regulates this through radar technology for advanced high-speed approaches. A special output is sent to the traffic controller calculating the speed of the approaching vehicles, ensuring that the green signal is extended, thus minimising the dilemma zone for that vehicle. An additional feature for controllers with the capability of extending an all-red for the intersection can be programmed ensuring that cross-traffic will not enter the intersection before a high-speed vehicle has safely passed.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Aimsun updates Next modelling software 
    September 17, 2021
    Aimsun continues to tweak models for bikes with new and reactive instructions
  • Nokia powers future of highways – one network at a time
    April 28, 2025

     

    Cutting-edge ITS technologies are exciting — with their potential for delivering safer, more sustainable and efficient highway travel. But they don’t operate in isolation. To perform at their best, they need a mission-critical communications network with outstanding capabilities, supporting connectivity from the roadside spanning the wide area to the data centre.

  • Econolite and Image Sensing Systems enhance video detection in Colorado
    June 14, 2016
    The City of Pueblo, Colorado, has chosen Autoscope RackVision Pro 2 (RVP2), from Econolite and Image Sensing Systems, to enhance video detection performance at intersections. Autoscope RVP2 with software version 10.5.0 will enable Pueblo to achieve the upgrade cost effectively by eliminating the need to replace current cameras, as well as using one RVP2 to operate two cameras. The City has ordered 39 RVP2 systems to be installed this year. The City of Pueblo was an early adopter of video detection technol
  • WiM eases structural health worries
    February 12, 2024
    Concerns about infrastructure are leading road authorities to consider the importance of Weigh in Motion solutions to monitor the wellbeing of their roads – and particularly bridges – finds Adam Hill