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

  • Ride-hailing and taxi drivers could face tougher criminal checks in England
    February 14, 2019
    Drivers who ply their trade on apps such as Uber could be under greater scrutiny as part of proposals being put forward by the UK government. The potential risk to passengers from the explosion of ride-hailing apps, as private-hire drivers are perceived to receive less thorough vetting – for example, to flag up past convictions – has long been argued. Incidents such as the murders of passengers by a Didi driver in China heightened such concerns - although critics point out that a US Uber driver who ad
  • Kria unveils more compact enforcement system
    March 25, 2014
    A growing, maturing set of enforcement applications and a new-generation system which is half the size of its predecessor are the focus on Kria’s stand. The Italian company, which specialises in 3D vision-based solutions, is finding that its open architecture solution is allowing customers’ applications to evolve in place, says company president Stefano Arrighetti.
  • More than ever to see at CARTES SECURE CONNEXIONS 2014
    July 9, 2014
    • Monday 3 November 2014: SESAMES Awards ceremony • Tuesday 4 November 2014: OPENING SUMMIT: a grand opening conference with leaders from the biggest companies in the security and payment sector • From Tuesday 4 to Thursday 6 November 2014: Trade exhibition with more than 450 exhibitors from over 50 countries • From Tuesday 4 to Thursday 6 November 2014: 120 conferences exploring the latest trends in the areas of identification, payment and mobility. For more information go to www.CA
  • StreetLight Data forms M2 Initiative to measure traffic interaction
    June 11, 2018
    Mobility analytics company StreetLight Data has launched its Multimodal Measurement Initiative (M2 Initiative) to measure the way various modes of travel interact. The company says it is developing new analytics that describe the behaviour of each transportation mode individually. The project will assess the interaction between trips made by personal vehicles, public transit, walking, biking, commercial trucks and gig economy trips made by on-demand rideshare and delivery drivers. For the first phase