Skip to main content

Kria shows T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID products

Italy-headquartered Kria is here at Intertraffic with a stand packed with new designs for the company's T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID line of products.
April 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Stefano Arrighetti (left) and André Antunes of Kria
Italy-headquartered 83 Kria is here at Intertraffic with a stand packed with new designs for the company's T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID line of products.


“Our 3D machine vision technology has so far been deployed for more than a decade all around the world, meeting many different applications, both fixed and mobile, and harsh installation and operation conditions,” says Stefano Arrighetti, Kria’s CEO and founder and the main driving force behind the company’s multiple ground-breaking products. “This mature and adaptive nature has translated to very positive feedback and repeating customers,” he said.

“We have been applying a lot of improvements stemming from the mobile world and have reduced the processing unit so much that it has now been integrated into the main camera housing, making for very sleek units. We still maintain modularity, though; our customers can still place the CPU elsewhere if the project so demands,” Arrighetti added.

One of the new releases is also Kria’s new ‘Transparentizer feature’, allowing face recognition-grade images from units such as the all-in-one T-Exspeed.

“T-Exspeed is our flagship product: it incorporates enforcement, security intelligence and infomobility capabilities,” says André Antunes, who handles International Sales at Kria. “This new feature is critical to meet with demands from the security market, responding to increasing needs for intelligence information from these systems.”

Kria is also keen on seeing new interest from upcoming enforcement applications such as WIM (weigh-in-motion), where the company says it can substantially help with speed variation and trajectory enforcement over weight sensor areas to radically improve the number of correct detections.

Related Content

  • March 20, 2018
    Tattile unveils Vega1 and the Smartaid
    Leading Italian ITS company and machine vision specialist Tattile has unveiled two major new innovations for the global traffic and enforcement market: the Vega1 and the Smartaid. The Vega1, a dual channel camera built in an extra-compact case to reduce installation impact, is mainly targeted to single lane vehicle tracking, traffic limited areas and priority lanes, as well as surveillance and access control and congestion charge areas.
  • January 26, 2012
    What's next for traffic management and data collection?
    As the technologies and stakeholders in traffic management evolve, what can we expect to see happening in the coming years? For many, the conversation of the moment is just how, and how far, the newer technologies and services provided principally by the private sector should be allowed to intrude into the realms of traffic management.
  • March 1, 2013
    Bringing enforcement standards into line
    Difficulties with the apparent accuracy of enforcement systems have been making the headlines in the United States over recent months. Jon Masters investigates the causes and possible cures. Online newspaper reports in the United States over recent months have painted a picture of the authorities struggling to keep on top of their speed and red light enforcement pro­grammes. Among a host of stories put out by the Washington Post and others on the subject of speed cameras during January, there were reports
  • October 19, 2015
    Authorities select enforce now, pay later option
    Outsouring of enforcement services is on the increase internationally as highway and traffic authorities seek further support in resources and expertise from the private sector. Jon Masters reports. Signs of a significant company making moves into a new market can usually be read as indication of likely growth in that particular sector. Q-Free’s expansion from tolling operations into general traffic enforcement could be viewed as surprising as it is moving into what are relatively mature and consolidating m