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

  • MaaS Alliance joins Global New Mobility Coalition
    November 25, 2019
    MaaS Alliance has joined The Global New Mobility Coalition (GNMC), a community of more than 100 institutions which aim to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 95%. The GNMC also seeks to improve transport efficiency by 70% and reduce mobility costs by 40%. As part of the deal, MaaS Alliance is to share knowledge with the GNMC alongside other organisations such as C40, Polis and ITF. MaaS Alliance is a non-profit organisation which seeks to establish a common approach to Mobility as a Service. It entered i
  • Last call for Gulf Traffic award nominations
    September 20, 2016
    Time is running out to submit nominations for the 2016 Gulf Traffic awards, which honour those companies and persons who have shown their commitment to developing and improving projects, initiatives or products for the benefit of the public and the region. Categories include: best new parking produce or supplier; ITS product of the year; consultancy of the year; contractor of the year; TRL student award; product innovation award; and many others. Submit nominations before 25 September 2016. More infor
  • Aipark exhibits platform to detect parking spot availability
    March 21, 2018
    Aipark is using Intertraffic to highlight its Internet of Things device that aims to monitor parking spot availability. Called ParkingSensor, the product is generally mounted to light poles or buildings and detects parked vehicles in its field view. One sensor is said to capture the availability of 20 parking spots in real time. The information is then sent to connected apps, car infotainment systems or management tools for efficient last mile navigation. Its patent pending system uses a cloud backend to p
  • Schick Electronic launches SP4-C Outdoor Camera System
    March 20, 2018
    Schick Electronic says it is surfing on the wave of technical evolution by launching a new generation of camera-based products for parking guidance systems (PGS) here at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018. The SP4-C Outdoor Camera System is a new solution that relies on state-of-the art artificial intelligence technology. One camera can monitor dozens of spaces and, as the system is based on standard Ethernet technology, it can easily be scaled to thousands of spaces. The cameras transmit still images to a centr