Skip to main content

Parifex unveils Vigie Mobile

French engineering firm Parifex has developed a selection of non-intrusive roadside control tools to meet the needs of road and traffic authorities around the world which are being showcased at Intertraffic.
March 20, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Nathalie Deguen of Pariflex

French engineering firm Parifex has developed a selection of non-intrusive roadside control tools to meet the needs of road and traffic authorities around the world which are being showcased at Intertraffic.


The company’s latest innovation, the Vigie Mobile, is a portable solution that combines the most advanced sensor and image capture technologies to monitor multiple violations at the same time and across up to six lanes. These include red light crossing, speed, lane-related and tailgating violations, and obstacle detection. The system is also able to detect four categories of vehicles (heavy trucks, cars, buses and motorcycles), as well as pedestrians, and it can monitor their speed accordingly.

Based on a 3D Lidar sensor, the Vigie Mobile can track vehicles from 100 metres upstream which ensures high accuracy and reliable measurement, even in difficult measurement conditions such as tailgating, changes of direction, heavy traffic, and more. Combined with its ANPR software, Parifex says the system is also adaptable for many other applications, including smart city, smart parking, traffic management, safety, and access control.

Parifex has been involved with the development of innovative road safety and traffic management solutions, Doppler and/or Lidar-based, for more than 30 years.

Stand 12.732

<%$Linker:

2

 

External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.parifex.com false http://www.parifex.com/ false false%>

 

 

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Self-driving bus collides with pedestrian in Vienna
    July 24, 2019
    A self-driving bus trial in the Austrian capital Vienna has been halted after a collision between a vehicle and pedestrian, says Bloomberg. Authorities are now investing the cause of the incident which led to minor injuries. According to Bloomberg, state broadcaster ORF says the Navya vehicle was driving at 7.5 miles per hour when it hit the 30-year-old woman in the knee. In a statement given to The Verge, Navya said witnesses had seen the pedestrian wearing headphones and looking at a mobile phon
  • Flir online training in September
    September 12, 2016
    Flir’s traffic webinars during September provide an introduction to the TrafiOne smart city sensor for traffic monitoring and dynamic traffic signal control. TrafiOne uses thermal imaging to detect the presence of pedestrians and cyclists that are approaching and waiting at the kerb or using the crossing. What’s new in FLUX 3.0 looks at the new features of this video management system, which collects traffic data, events, alarms and video images created by a wide variety of video detection modules. Th
  • Cisco’s low-cost fibre optic solution for traffic monitoring
    March 21, 2018
    Cisco’s display focuses on a novel way of detecting traffic speeds, congestion and incidents without the use of loops. The company is using a fibre optic cable positioned alongside the road and down which it shines a light. Vibration created by passing vehicles create vibration which disrupts the passage of the light. Cisco has developed algorithms that can translate these disruptions to determine what type of vehicle is passing, in which direction, the lane it is using and the speed it is travelling. The
  • Waymo may operate AVs in Phoenix ‘without safety driver’
    October 17, 2019
    Ride-hailing company Waymo may be about to start operating fully-autonomous vehicles (AVs) to pick people up - without a safety driver. An email sent to users, which appeared on Reddit, said people in Phoenix, Arizona, who were matched with an AV will see a notification in the app that confirms the car will not have a trained driver. Users can tap a ‘What to Expect’ button within the app to learn more about the AVs. They can also communicate with a rider support agent at any part of the trip via the app o