Skip to main content

Park Assist shows Find Your Car Interface

Park Assist, part of the TKH Group, will highlight parking innovations at Intertraffic Amsterdam including the Find Your Car Interface and the M4 Smart-Sensor System which has now been deployed in 20 countries around the world.
April 5, 2016 Read time: 1 min
8315 Park Assist, part of the TKH Group, will highlight parking innovations at Intertraffic Amsterdam including the Find Your Car Interface and the M4 Smart-Sensor System which has now been deployed in 20 countries around the world.

With the Find Your Car locator feature in Park Finder, all a driver has to do is enter his/her licence plate number. In seconds, the core system scours a database of currently parked vehicles – which were identified through the integrated Licence Plate Recognition (LPR) unit when they entered a space – to provide the exact location and directions to get there.

Meanwhile, the camera-based M4 Smart-Sensor System puts processing intelligence right at the parking space level. Each individual sensor has the ability to stream surveillance video to a management system, while also sending rich data for the company’s integrated licence plate recognition (LPR) and occupancy tracking.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tattile aids digital parking enforcement 
    June 18, 2021
    French capital Paris has 25 vehicles equipped with Tattile ANPR cameras 
  • Advancing traffic management for smart cities
    September 3, 2024
    Promises of increased safety, less pollution, increased productivity and a better quality of life in smart cities are just too good to be ignored. Dany Longval of Teledyne Flir talks through some of the challenges
  • Investing in ITS: Show us the money
    April 8, 2022
    The ITS industry is currently attracting a lot of interest from private equity and venture capital providers. Adam Hill asks some of the people who have their eyes on the market what makes it such a good bet
  • AVT cameras, part of a new generation of ETC
    August 20, 2015
    Allied Vision Technologies (AVT) has supplied Norwegian company Q-Free with its high performance machine vision cameras for use in electronic toll collection (ETC) systems. Q-Free has developed an ETC installation based on a single gantry which relies on the latest machine imaging systems, radio systems and automatic license plate recognition (ALPR) software technologies to collect toll data. This versatile system is designed to do pure video tolling or a combination of video and radio tolling depending