Skip to main content

Sanef ITS Technologies makes ITS World Congress debut and shows FastFlow toll gantry

Making its public debut here at the ITS World Congress is Sanef ITS Technologies, a new leader for mobility and toll system integration. After decades operating under the CS brand, CS ITS has become Sanef ITS Technologies with the acquisition of the activity by Sanef Groupe, a leading operator and concessionaire. The company claims its unique set of references and expertise, are now part of a new market leader delivering best-in class mobility systems. Already partners on key projects, Sanef and Sanef ITS T
October 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Laura Dal Zilio displays the new look identity
Making its public debut here at the ITS World Congress is 6723 Sanef ITS Technologies, a new leader for mobility and toll system integration. After decades operating under the 6420 CS brand, CS ITS has become Sanef ITS Technologies with the acquisition of the activity by Sanef Groupe, a leading operator and concessionaire. The company claims its unique set of references and expertise are now part of a new market leader delivering best-in class mobility systems.

Already partners on key projects, 480 Sanef and Sanef ITS Technologies have strengthened their alliance in supplying and operating innovative and revenue-effective toll systems. For example, at the end of this year, The Port Mann/Highway 1 (PMH1) bridge in Vancouver, Canada, will be opened to traffic.

Sanef ITS Technologies is supplying the full toll system with its FastFlow unique toll gantry and its back office suite, FastToll ERP. Sanef, through the TC Flow consortium, will be in charge of the operations. The PMH1 project is the most challenging project currently in progress, with multi-protocol reading (including sticker tag 6C), video tolling, and HOV lanes (carpool lanes), under the widest toll gantry ever built.

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 74626 0 oLinkExternal www.c-s.fr www.c-s.fr false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=74626 true false%>

Related Content

  • March 24, 2014
    Saferoads displays Omni Stop Bollard
    Australian firm Saferoads is offering an improved roadside protection product in the shape of its new Omni Stop Bollard. The product is suited to installations such as around construction workzones or pedestrian and commercial areas, where there may be site personnel or people congregating alongside a busy roadway. The Omni Stop Bollards can be spaced so as to allow free access for pedestrians or cyclists, while providing protection from errant vehicles.
  • October 23, 2012
    RuggedCom unveils RS900GP managed Ethernet switch
    RuggedCom is showing its new RuggedMax 4G broadband technology base dish, for users that need a private communications system unaffected by possible outages of public networks. “With a system like this you get the same benefits and range of 4G technology, but because it’s a private network it allows you complete control of your own system,” said Sean Fraser, RuggedCom’s ITS market manager. “It’s suitable for any critical asset that needs to have constant coverage and connectivity and you can’t afford it to
  • May 23, 2012
    Five-port switch
    ComNet, a manufacturer of fiber optic transmission and networking equipment, is showcasing its latest five-port Ethernet switch on the showroom floor at ITS America. Designed to include proprietary self-managing technology, the switch requires no user intervention and is pre-programmed to avoid flooding the network.
  • March 26, 2014
    Agendum software speeds Amsterdam parking fines process
    The city of Amsterdam is sending out parking fines faster and more efficiently than ever, following the introduction last month of Agendum’s Scanman back-office software. Licence plate information recorded by enforcement officers on foot or in vehicles, together with the vehicle’s position and time, is transmitted to a control centre where the entire process is handled automatically. Checks are built in, said Agendum consultant Barbara van den Berg at Intertraffic. These included waiting for a short peri