Skip to main content

Telent wins WiFi deal for National Highways

Contract includes infrastructure for 130 sites with English motorway agency
December 9, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
'Vital' to have 'resilient IT infrastructure needed to ensure our roads are flowing freely and safely' (© Jevanto | Dreamstime.com)

Telent has been appointed by England’s National Highways agency to operate and maintain its corporate wide area network (WAN), enabling collaboration and digital security.

As well as providing the WiFi infrastructure for all National Highways staff, the agency’s Corporate Network Service connects and supports operational systems across more than 130 National Highways sites, including regional operations centres, satellite offices and depots.

Telent said it will provide a secure, robust and flexible network with maximum network availability. This is critical in connecting people who keep traffic on England's motorways and major A-roads - which National Highways manages - flowing safely. 

Telent will additionally provide enhanced network security monitoring, enabling National Highways to better secure its large volumes of data and applications.

“The road networks are the backbone of this country with countless people and businesses relying on them every day,” said Nigel Weldon, highways business development director at Telent. “So it’s vital that governing bodies such as National Highways have the resilient IT infrastructure needed to ensure our roads are flowing freely and safely.”

Telent is also working with National Highways to transform and operate the National Roads Telecommunications Service (NRTS). Telent’s network solution will integrate with National Highways' existing IT and operational technology systems and aligns with its overall digital strategy, particularly regarding connectivity, hosting and platform strategies.

“We chose Telent to manage our Corporate Network Services following a successful competitive tender process,” said Craig Bromage, head of infrastructure and platforms for National Highways. The contract was secured through Telent’s place on the Information Technology Commercial Framework, a key procurement mechanism for National Highways.

Apart from England’s National Highways agency, Telent’s clients include Transport for London.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Developing Mexico's ITS standards and infrastructure
    February 28, 2013
    Promoting open market conditions for ITS deployment remains a major part of Mexico’s recent infrastructure modernization program. Travis P Dunn, partner at D’Artagnan Consulting, looks at the progress so far. In the past six years, Mexico has embarked on an ambitious infrastructure modernization program, calling for the construction and improvement of more than 19,000km of road infrastructure and the deployment of advanced technologies that improve safety, efficiency, and convenience for road users. One of
  • PTV’s software solutions help cities combat congestion and pollution
    January 25, 2018
    Smart cities must rely on a mobility mix, real-time predictive models and collaborations, argues PTV’s Miller Crockart. Transport is reaching a new frontier and cities are at the forefront of the trend: for many urbanites, mobility no longer equals a privately-owned vehicle. They want on-demand services that cater for their individual mobility needs efficiently and sustainably - whether that is shared bikes or autonomous electric vehicles. Private car ownership will not drop overnight. The smooth
  • Highways Agency launches Bag and Bin it litter campaign
    April 7, 2014
    The Bag and Bin it campaign recently launched by the UK’s Highway’s Agency runs until the end of April and aims to tackle the more than 7,500 tonnes of litter thrown on to the nation’s highways each year. The litter blighting England's motorways costs at least US£9 million a year to collect and could fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool four times over, according to the latest figures from the Highways Agency.
  • Brazil opts for freeflow tolling
    April 9, 2014
    David Crawford explores the technical background of Brazil’s First multi-lane free-flow tolling system. The 2013 opening of Brazil’s first fully-operational, all-vehicle, multi-lane free-flow (MLFF) tolling system in the state of São Paolo has set the scene for a new phase of modern electronic fee collection (EFC) deployment in Latin America’s largest country. It has toll programmes at both federal and state levels, with São Paulo – the most populous state, with the largest road network – leading in the awa