Skip to main content

Q-Free and Dars deliver C-ITS in Slovenia

Project on Ljubljana's ring road will see some VW vehicles receiving messages
By Adam Hill May 15, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
VW vehicles will receive in-car notifications such as traffic incidents, construction zones and low visibility alerts (image: Q-Free)

Q-Free has collaborated with Slovenian road operator Dars in the deployment of a new cooperative ITS (C-ITS) network in the eastern European country's capital, Ljubljana.

The system will enable equipped Volkswagen vehicles to receive in-car notifications such as traffic incidents, construction zones, low visibility alerts, and wrong-way driver warnings.

The new network sees 25 roadside units (RSUs) on more than 100km of Ljubljana’s major ring-road. These RSUs will transmit information to VW drivers, while receiving traffic flow information from them at the same time. 

Slovenia sits between Austria, Croatia, Hungary and Italy and is on a key freight route between the European nations. Q-Free says traffic volume, particularly around Ljubljana, has increased over the last few years, with some estimates suggesting a 5% annual rise. 

Q-Free and Dars have done something together on a smaller scale before: in 2018, a local pilot used nine RSUs with a central management system.

In this new deployment, Dars will also use five vehicle-mounted mobile units, probably around workzones and traffic incidents. 

“We put a high value on our relationship with Dars and though this solution is not part of our commercial portfolio, we decided to develop a customised solution that would exactly fit their needs,” explains Q-Free CEO Mark Talbot.

“I’m proud of our team for recognising that we’re not just in the traffic management business, we’re in the relationship business."

Related Content

  • February 1, 2012
    Include ITS in policy decisions from the start, not as an afterthought
    DG TREN's Fotis Karamitsos, on why the European Commission's new ITS Action Plan is looking to the past for future direction. The European Commission's (EC's) new Action Plan for the Deployment of Intelligent Transport Systems in Europe, which was announced as 2008 drew to a close, intends that transport and travel become 'cleaner; more efficient, including energy efficient; and safer and more secure'. At first sight, that wording might be interpreted as marking a significant policy shift within Europe, wit
  • January 24, 2024
    Workzone app deal for One.network in Florida
    Contract follows pilot where 2,000 workers were trained to use lane closure system
  • March 1, 2013
    HeERO - harmonising e-Call across Europe
    The second stage of the EC’s HeERO project, which aims to address some of the issues surrounding the eCall system, has just got underway. Jason Barnes reports. As the European Commission (EC)’s Har­monised eCall European Pilot (HeERO) project progresses into its second stage, ‘HeERO 2’, significant progress has already been made in addressing the technological and institutional issues relating to the pan-European deployment of an eCall system based around the new ‘112’ universal emergency telephone number.
  • December 6, 2022
    Hayden AI’s Renee Autumn Ray: ‘It’s about problem solving’
    Renee Autumn Ray is senior director of global strategy for Hayden AI. She has also admitted to impostor syndrome, has no time for people who scorn the public sector and offers one simple rule about social media. Adam Hill meets her to find out what that is, among other things