Skip to main content

Traffic Data Systems wins Hamburg bridge WiM deal

Köhlbrand Bridge across River Elbe is second-longest in Germany
By Adam Hill March 20, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Fifty years of heavy traffic 'have taken their toll' (© Wirestock | Dreamstime.com)

Traffic Data Systems has been awarded a bridge Weigh in Motion contract from the Hamburg Port Authority (HPA) in northern Germany.

The Köhlbrand Bridge across the River Elbe is one of the most important transport links in the port of Hamburg.

"Fifty years of heavy traffic have taken their toll on this bridge," explains Traffic Data Systems founder Florian Weiss.

"Today not only significantly more - but also significantly heavier - vehicles pass the bridge than planned. That's 38,000 vehicles per day, 43% of which are heavy goods vehicles, so extensive renovation work has already been necessary several times."

The HPA put a WiM system out to tender for the first time in 2010; this was supplied by Traffic Data Systems and operated for several years. Just a few weeks after it went into operation, a ban on lorries overtaking was imposed and the maximum permitted speed was reduced from 80 km/h to 60 km/h.

At the end of 2024, the HPA put the renewal of the WiM system out to tender - and this was also won by Traffic Data Systems at the beginning of 2025.

Its WiM technology fulfills the requirements of OIML R134. In addition to overview and ANPR cameras, scanners that graphically display the profile of the vehicles will also be supplied. Construction of the WiM system is planned for summer this year.

The reinforced concrete and prestressed concrete structure/steel cable-stayed bridge was opened in 1974. At 3,618m long, 135m high (clearance height 53m), it is Germany's second-longest bridge.

Köhlbrand Bridge's elegant and unique design has made it an official cultural monument of the city of Hamburg. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Monitoring, detection and control systems inside tunnels can do much to improve traveller safety
    August 6, 2013
    ITS technology can do a great deal to improve tunnel safety, as Colin Sowman discovers. It was back in April 2004 that the European Parliament adopted the EU Directive which lays down the Minimum Safety Requirements for Tunnels in the Trans-European Road Network (2004/54/EC). This was the first unitary legislation setting minimum safety standards for European road tunnels and was designed to harmonise the management of tunnel safety at a national level. Operators of existing tunnels have until 30 April 201
  • IBTTA 2011 Annual Meeting highlights developing trends in tolling
    January 26, 2012
    Alain Estiot, chief meeting organiser of this year's IBTTA Annual Meeting and Exhibition, talks about hot topics for discussion. The IBTTA's 79th Annual Meeting and Exhibition, which takes place this year in Berlin in September, will once again take many of the developing trends from around the world and look at their effects on the tolling sector. Host organisation Toll Collect's Alain Estiot, chief meeting organiser, says that the event has to be viewed against a backdrop of major global change.
  • Canada looks to HOT lanes to tackle congestion
    March 16, 2017
    David Crawford sees an evidence-based approach to HOT lane conversions. Canada’s first high occupancy toll (HOT) lanes opened on 16 September 2016 as a pilot on a 16.5km section of existing high occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes running in both directions along Toronto’s Queen Elizabeth Way. Promised in two recent budgets
  • Project CROCODILE wins award for smart use of data
    May 16, 2016
    Project CROCODILE, which was launched in 2013 to establish a trans-national data exchange infrastructure to end breakdown of cross-border traffic has won the 2016 Transport Achievement Award in the freight category. The prize is awarded by the International Transport Forum (ITF), a Paris-based intergovernmental organisation and policy think tank with 57 member countries. The project is co-financed by the European Union’s TEN-T programme and aimed to establish a framework to collect and exchange data for