Skip to main content

Ekin’s AI solution: transforming traffic management and law enforcement

Ekin Patrol G2 is a mobile traffic unit covering seven lanes
March 21, 2025 Read time: 1 min
Founder and CEO Akif Ekin with the Ekin Patrol G2

Since 2012, the first and only smart light bar has provided real-time video coverage across seven lanes, delivering continuous monitoring without additional roadside infrastructure. Equipped with automatic licence plate recognition (ALPR) and 360-degree video, it ensures complete situational awareness.

Ekin Patrol G2 extends this capability as a mobile traffic unit, covering seven lanes while capturing high-resolution data on vehicle flow, speed and parking activity. It provides real-time alerts for traffic violations, congestion and hotlist detections. Designed as a fully self-contained system, it operates without using trunk space, making it highly efficient for dynamic deployment.

All units communicate seamlessly within a single ecosystem, ensuring 100% coverage through the Maestro backend platform. This integration allows for real-time data sharing, predictive insights, and coordinated traffic and parking management. The system acts as a serious force multiplier, helping law enforcement and city officials do more with less by automating tasks and optimising resources.

Content produced in association with Ekin

Related Content

  • May 4, 2012
    Bus lane enforcement reduces costs, journey times
    The Southcote Lane site in the UK town of Reading is a notorious shortcut for motorists travelling into the town centre. The resultant congestion at the end of the bus lane, when motorists tried to re-enter the main traffic flow, caused congestion and disruption to bus timetables. Reading Borough Council wanted a cost-efficient, effective solution to accurately capture bus lane violations and improve bus travel times. Reading became the first local authority in the UK to deploy Siemens's LaneHawk fully auto
  • June 15, 2023
    Traffic management: risky business
    Adding a real-time accident risk layer to the profile of a road network ticks all the crucial boxes: it saves time, fuel, money and, ultimately, lives. Harriet King of Valerann explains the brain power of Lanternn by Valerann’s Core Fusion Engine...
  • February 2, 2012
    Making the case for ALPR in enforcement
    Federal Signal's Brian Shockley uses examples from around the world to make the case for the greater use of automatic license plate recognition technology in the US. It is time, he says, to consider the possibilities of a national network and the use of average speed enforcement
  • February 8, 2016
    In-car video system delivers improved enforcement
    Israeli company RoadMetric will use Intertraffic Amsterdam to exhibit, for the first time, its leading product, Enforcement Deputy. A fully-integrated in-car video system for police patrols, it combines continuous HD recording in four directions, affordable automated licence plate reading ALPR capability, streaming video for superior command and control and what the company claims are game-changing tools for traffic law enforcement. RoadMetric claims Enforcement Deputy allows one police patrol to catch ten