Skip to main content

Metrocount exports traffic survey systems around the world

Every time you drive by a vehicle monitoring system, chances are it’s from Metrocount – systems which are on display at this week’s ITS World Congress in Melbourne. For close to 20 years, Australian company Metrocount, has been developing advanced traffic survey systems and exporting them around the globe. Its multi-award winning system has remained customerfocused, with feedback from road managers incorporated in updates to ensure the system continues to deliver useful traffic information. “Traffic surve
October 12, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Vern Bastian of MetroCount
Every time you drive by a vehicle monitoring system, chances are it’s from 8335 Metrocount – systems which are on display at this week’s ITS World Congress in Melbourne.

For close to 20 years, Australian company Metrocount, has been developing advanced traffic survey systems and exporting them around the globe. Its multi-award winning system has remained customerfocused, with feedback from road managers incorporated in updates to ensure the system continues to deliver useful traffic information.

“Traffic surveying was often regarded as an inexact science, but with accuracy above 99% we believe our software is second to none in terms of accurately presenting traffic conditions,” said Vern Bastian, GM, Metrocount.

With moving people from cars and into public transport and bicycles the end game for every ’smart’ city, monitoring the transition away from cars is vital.

But bicycle monitoring is only part of the equation; while bicycle trips are increasing are car volumes and congestion decreasing?

“Today, progressive road managers are recording bike journeys alongside vehicle monitoring,” said Bastian. “So by bringing together cycling and vehicle data, engineers and planners can identify correlations between cycling volume or speed and road flow, speed and congestion,” he said.

Related Content

  • April 5, 2016
    MetroCount measures bicycle metrics and senses axles
    Rather fittingly, MetroCount has arrived in Amsterdam with a new portable bicycle counter (the MC5620) as well as the MC5606 remote traffic classifier – both of which operate using thin walled pneumatic tubes.
  • February 23, 2016
    Metrocount’s mobile cycle counting delivers accurate volume and speed
    In late 2015 MetroCount released its second bike counter, the MC5620. Building on the successes of the world-renowned MC5600 portable vehicle traffic counter, as visitors to the company’s stand at Intertraffic Amsterdam will see, the MC5620 has now been refined to achieve the highest degree of sensitivity required for detecting bicycle tyres. The company says this system has been proven to detect cyclists with 99% accuracy in video tests conducted in real-life conditions.
  • July 11, 2025
    Data clears the road, says TomTom
    Technology is one of the main tools in cutting congestion quickly and effectively. But it can’t just be about making things better for car drivers, explains TomTom’s Andy Marchant…
  • May 27, 2014
    Olympic challenges in Sochi
    Sporting events always create problems for traffic planners and none more so than the Winter Olympics. It is difficult to think of more diametrically opposite challenges for transport planners than the 2012 Olympics in London and this year’s Winter Olympics in Sochi: from a summer event in the heart of a megacity with well established transport infrastructure to winter games with unpredictable weather and events in remote and mountainous locations. The Winter Games are always a challenge and Sochi was no di