Skip to main content

Dynniq’s Flow Experience comes to life

Dynniq, which offers integrated mobility, parking and energy solutions and services, will feature new innovations at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018, which will be presented through a unique virtual reality (VR) experience and several highly engaging talks and workshops. The Dynniq CrossCycle is an app that provides extra services to cyclists. Cyclists approaching a traffic light are detected earlier than at the stop bar, when they would be able to push the button. It means an individual cyclist has a
February 19, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

8343 Dynniq, which offers integrated mobility, parking and energy solutions and services, will feature new innovations at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018, which will be presented through a unique virtual  reality (VR) experience and several highly engaging talks and workshops.

The Dynniq CrossCycle is an app that provides extra services to cyclists. Cyclists approaching a traffic light are detected earlier than at the stop bar, when they would be able to push the button. It means an individual cyclist has a higher chance of getting green while groups of cyclists will get priority as a whole.

Meanwhile, the Dynniq CrossWalk app helps the elderly or people with a handicap to cross the road safely by turning the light green for longer. This innovative technology based on GPS localisation makes it possible to align the duration of the green pedestrian traffic light with individual needs. The light remains green for longer depending on the degree of reduced mobility.

At the Smart Mobility Theatres, Dynniq and WPS, a Dynniq company, will hold six engaging talks/workshops, dates and times of which will be published later. Topics include Parking as a Service (PaaS) – keep up the pace of changing consumer behavior, by WPS;  C-ITS deployment in Europe (in cooperation with MAPTm and Blervaque Sprl); The Flow Experience Showcase Aurora: safe and secure automated transport in all conditions (in cooperation with Finnish Transport Agency); Smart cities link available data on emission to smart mobility ; GreenFlow: the potential of connected trucks; and The Flow Experience Workshop: parking and energy solutions for cities and municipalities by WPS.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • One-stop parking management launches at Intertraffic
    February 17, 2016
    Parkonomy, an innovative technology start-up that launched at the beginning of 2015 to offer a convenient, one-stop-shop solution to booking and managing parking for clients and customers in the UK, will be at Intertraffic Amsterdam to begin developing EU market opportunities during 2016. The Parkonomy website (www.parkonomy.com) acts as a comprehensive car park search engine into which customers can enter either their current location, or a car park’s name or unique location number, to find the perfect par
  • Agendum demonstrates digital parking enforcement to aid sustainable parking
    February 12, 2016
    Agendum will use Intertraffic Amsterdam to demonstrate how parking data analytics optimises parking enforcement and provides information for a sustainable parking policy. The company, a forerunner in digital parking enforcement solutions, has taken the enforcement process to a higher level as visitors to their stand will experience when they take a ‘virtual enforcement journey’.
  • Kerb your enthusiasm, warns Passport
    March 4, 2019
    Dynamic kerbside management is crucial if urban authorities are to address increasingly chaotic situations caused by the gig economy and mobility innovation, says Adam Warnes at Passport Demand for the kerbside is growing and changing and it’s no surprise when you consider the recent innovations within the mobility industry. For starters, there are new modes of transport, including ride-shares, electric vehicles (EVs), dockless cycles, last-mile consolidations and autonomous vehicles (AVs). Secondly, the
  • ITS homes in on cycling safety
    April 9, 2014
    A new generation of ITS equipment is helping road authorities get to grips with cycle safety – and not a moment too soon as Colin Sowman discovers. Cyclists - remember them? Apparently not. At least not according to the OECD 2013 report Cycling, Health and Safety which contains the statement: ‘Cyclists are often forgotten in the design of the road traffic system’. Looking through the statistics that exist (each country appears to compile them differently) it is not difficult to see how such a conclusion cou