Skip to main content

Siemens adds to portfolio of ITS technologies

This morning Siemens is using the ITS World Congress for the launch of three important new additions to its portfolio of intelligent traffic systems that will power our cities today and in the future.
September 8, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Glenn Massarano of Siemens with the traffic management software

This morning 189 Siemens is using the ITS World Congress for the launch of three important new additions to its portfolio of intelligent traffic systems that will power our cities today and in the future.

The company’s new additions to its portfolio being unveiled include the industry’s first centralised traffic management software, not just for large metropolitan areas but for cities of all sizes. Siemens Tactics smartGuard will allow cities to monitor, view and respond to changing traffic conditions from a central location in real-time.

The software is hosted on a cloud-based system making it easier to operate and most cost-effective. Real-time traffic updates from the system will allow operators to respond to conditions and change patterns in an instant, reducing congestion and increasing safety.

Also being launched is a new advanced traffic controller to meet the safety and efficiency needs of next-generation intersections. The Siemens M60 Advanced Traffic Controller (ATC) is the company’s first to comply with ATC industry standards and allows cities the ability to cost-effectively upgrade existing models without needing to invest in new equipment.

Additionally, the company is releasing the latest update to its Advanced Traffic Management System, Tactics 3.0 The software provides the comphrensive status of an intersection making it easy for traffic engineers to make quick and informed decisions. With Tactics 3.0, Siemens says traffic agencies can centrally manage and administer their traffic intersection from a single point with the web-based software.

Booth: 2001
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12626 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.siemens.com</span> Siemens Website true /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12626 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Streetline updates award-winning parking app
    May 22, 2012
    The latest release of Streetline’s award-winning Parker smart parking app for iPhone and Android allows users to quickly view available parking options based on pricing, location and/or real-time availability. Parker 3.0 also features voice guidance to indicate parking nearby, as well as the ability to find parking based on user-defined preferences such as electric vehicle charging stations or handicapped spaces. Motorists can also search by points of interest – including airports, universities, shopping ce
  • Telespazio heralds increased use of EGNOS technology to track dangerous goods
    October 24, 2012
    Italy’s largest industrial company, oil and gas giant ENI, has asked all its third-party transport operators to use the new EGNOS system, which allows more accurate tracking of dangerous goods in transit. Satellite-based EGNOS improves the accuracy of existing GPS tracking systems, giving a vehicle’s position to an accuracy of one metre, compared to around four metres by GPS alone, said Telespazio’s Antonello Di Fazio at the World Congress yesterday. EGNOS can be installed via an overnight software upload.
  • Noptel shows laser sensors
    March 25, 2014
    Finnish company Noptel is demonstrating its Speeder X1 and CMP52 laser distance measurement sensors at the show. The Speeder X1 uses a dual laser transmitter to provide overlapping vehicle profile analysis for speed, height and length measurement, while the CMP52 single-beam laser radar is applicable to a range of traffic control and law enforcement duties.
  • ARH promotes Hermes traffic management system
    March 25, 2014
    The ancient Greek messenger of the gods Hermes had the ability to move effortlessly across boundaries – in his case, between the worlds of gods and humans. Hungarian company ARH claims the same sort of ease of movement for its Hermes traffic management system, its new middleware designed to connect roadside endpoints with a central traffic management interface. Its aim is to offer its systems integrator partners what it describes as a flexible and fast piece of middleware that can be incorporated into an