Skip to main content

Cubic demonstrates integrated traffic management solutions

Cubic Transportation Systems, the leading integrator of payment and information solutions and related services for intelligent travel applications, will be demonstrating its full range of integrated solutions and services for the future of traffic management at the 2015 ITS World Congress. As the company points out, across the world, urban and regional transport networks face challenges that are set to intensify in the years ahead. Cubic said that these challenges can only be addressed with a truly holis
July 31, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
378 Cubic Transportation Systems, the leading integrator of payment and information solutions and related services for intelligent travel applications, will be demonstrating its full range of integrated solutions and services for the future of traffic management at the 2015 ITS World Congress.

As the company points out, across the world, urban and regional transport networks face challenges that are set to intensify in the years ahead. Cubic said that these challenges can only be addressed with a truly holistic approach to multi-modal transport management that effectively analyses how transport infrastructure is performing and uses intelligent insights from a wide range of data to bring operations to the peak of performance.

Cubic has drawn on its long experience in transport revenue collection and ITS to inform the development of systems and solutions that seamlessly unite across all modes of travel, real-time and predictive traveller information. The company said that these truly integrated intelligent transport solutions are coming together through its vision – NextCity – enhanced by the company’s 7925 Urban Insights big data analytics capability. This is allowing informed, real-time journey decisions to be made and enabling operators and authorities to optimise how all modes of transport are working, while maintaining a firm focus on the experience of the end-user.

Cubic will show how the technology to bring about revolutionary change already exists, and is in operation in cities around the world – that change is underway and the benefits are being felt already.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cooperative infrastructure systems waiting for the go ahead
    February 3, 2012
    Despite much research and technological promise, progress towards cooperative infrastructure system deployment is still slow. Here, Robert Cone and John Miles take a considered look at how and when it might come about. From a systems engineering viewpoint it looks logical and inevitable that vehicles should be communicating between themselves and with the road infrastructure. But seen from a business viewpoint the case is not proven.
  • Data handling important for autonomous vehicles
    December 8, 2016
    Data handling is becoming an ever-greater part of transportation and never more so than with autonomous vehicles, as Andrew Bardin Williams hears from some big names.
  • Investment and innovation the future of ITS
    January 31, 2012
    Cisco's Paul Brubaker, former administrator of the US Department of Transportation's (USDOT's) Research and Innovative Technology Administration (RITA), takes a look at how the ITS sector is starting to attract the attention of major corporations and what this will mean for intelligent transportation in the coming years
  • Sustainable mobility: innovative solutions needed to reduce traffic emissions
    May 1, 2021
    Kapsch TrafficCom’s Mobility Report 2021 reveals how new ITS measures such as vehicle connectivity and AI-based data processing can help create joined-up traffic management