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

  • New generation of pay-on-foot parking technology
    May 28, 2014
    Designed with some of the most challenging parking environments in mind, especially shopping centres and transport hubs, the WPS ParkAdvance system is built around a new IP-based operating system architecture that enables it to simply and directly connect with multiple technologies being deployed in car parks both now and in the future.
  • Artificial intelligence changes Idemia’s image
    May 13, 2021
    Idemia pledges to make life safer for VRUs with new products based around existing technology, Jean-Paul Baldacci tells Adam Hill
  • Priority boosts ridership and cuts congestion
    May 4, 2016
    Transit priority is proving a win-win in Europe and Australia. David Crawford reports. Technology that integrates with the Australian-originated Sydney Coordinated Adaptive Traffic System (SCATS) is driving bus signal priority and performance analysis initiatives on both sides of the world; in its homeland, with a major deployment in 2015, and in the capital of the Republic of Ireland.
  • Car to car communications a step closer
    December 14, 2012
    Vehicle manufacturers have targeted 2015 for the first cars to roll off European assembly lines fitted with operational V2X technology. They and their partners in the Car 2 Car Communications Consortium are confident of meeting the target, reports Jon Masters. Around three years from now vehicles should be appearing in showrooms boasting the capability of communicating with each other. Manufacturers will have started fitting the first proprietary car-to-car driver-aid safety devices and deployment of ‘vehic