Skip to main content

Siemens displays on intermodal and integrated eTicketing system

Intelligent traffic information and management systems are the key to reducing traffic jams and accidents. And, as Siemens points out, they can also cut carbon dioxide emissions by up to 20 per cent. "By managing and monitoring networked traffic flows, our goal is to make mobility in cities significantly more efficient, and above all more environmentally friendly," said Sami Atiya, Head of the Mobility and Logistics Division of Siemens' new Infrastructure & Cities Sector. But it isn’t just intelligent traff
October 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Simone Kohler and the easy to use smartcard
Intelligent traffic information and management systems are the key to reducing traffic jams and accidents. And, as 189 Siemens points out, they can also cut carbon dioxide emissions by up to 20 per cent. "By managing and monitoring networked traffic flows, our goal is to make mobility in cities significantly more efficient, and above all more environmentally friendly," said Sami Atiya, Head of the Mobility and Logistics Division of Siemens' new Infrastructure & Cities Sector.

But it isn’t just intelligent traffic solutions that 120 Siemens Mobility and Logistics is showcasing here in Vienna. For instance, the company is highlighting its intermodal and integrated eTicketing system, an electronic ticket that is the key to networking different modes of transport. Siemens is demonstrating how easy it is to complete and pay for an individual journey using a smartcard on the basis of the service or line actually used, regardless of whether the traveller is taking the train, leasing a bike or paying to park their car.

Siemens is also highlighting its satellite-aided processes for truck toll systems, where the position of individual vehicles is determined with the aid of a global satellite navigation system. On-board units supply the necessary data for the collection of tolls. The unit itself determines whether a particular route is subject to tolls, calculates the tolls payable during the trip and transmits this information to the relevant data center via a cellular network.

Meanwhile, Siemens is also featuring developments in cooperative traffic signals, advanced parking, direct journey time measurement, train location technology and functions from the Sitraffic shared platform - Sitraffic Concert, Sitraffic Scala and Sitraffic Guide.

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

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New partnership expands ISS technology to NuPark
    September 7, 2014
    Above-ground detection sensor and solutions developer Image Sensing Systems (ISS) arrives at World Congress having just completed an integration and partnership agreement with NuPark, the licence plate recognition and focused parking solutions provider.
  • International debut for Metric’s VivoPark ANPR
    February 6, 2014
    Metric Group predicts that 2014 will go down in its long history as ‘the year of innovation.’ The company is bringing to the market several innovations, not only to current concepts, but new ones as well. Visitors to Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 will have an opportunity of seeing these Metric innovations, across the parking industry from local government to retail and leisure, at first hand.
  • Agendum software speeds Amsterdam parking fines process
    March 26, 2014
    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
  • Sensys ascends to the cloud
    May 22, 2012
    All of Sensys’ wireless sensors are now being shipped with capability for use with Cloud Connect – the company’s new data hosting service. Traffic engineers can monitor an entire region’s intersections without necessity for servers or software. The technology is claimed to have completely eliminated uncertainty or guesswork over whether signal control detection equipment is working properly. Cloud Connect provides data in real-time, so there is no reason to have broken inductive loops at intersections.