Skip to main content

Safer Place demonstrates Safe Traffic Platform

Safer Place is showing its new Safe Traffic Platform, a single, video-based enforcement platform that covers a range of high-risk traffic violations. At its stand in the Elicium area of the RAI, the company will be explaining how it brings together several types of smart city infrastructures such as cameras, IT and 4G. The company says that the Safe Traffic Platform delivers a range of applications that can be used on PCs, laptops, tablets and smartphones and generates up to 15 times more tickets per office
April 4, 2016 Read time: 1 min

8316 Safer Place is showing its new Safe Traffic Platform, a single, video-based enforcement platform that covers a range of high-risk traffic violations.

At its stand in the Elicium area of the RAI, the company will be explaining how it brings together several types of smart city infrastructures such as cameras, IT and 4G.

The company says that the Safe Traffic Platform delivers a range of applications that can be used on PCs, laptops, tablets and smartphones and generates up to 15 times more tickets per officer than other systems.

It says that the new platform also reduces the number of appeals against tickets through the legally-compliant video and photographic evidence it produces.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Open road tolling: safer with less congestion
    January 30, 2012
    Michael J. Davis of PBS&J looks at the positive effect that open road tolling can have on safety
  • VRU safety report urges enforcement
    March 18, 2020
    Enforcement must be at the heart of a drive to reduce vulnerable road user deaths and injuries, says the latest report from the European Transport Safety Council. Its facts and figures give authorities the justification to invest more in camera technology and other ITS solutions
  • New system expedites border crossings
    October 28, 2016
    Enforcing border controls can create long queues for travellers, David Crawford looks at potential solutions. Long delays at border crossings in both North America and Europe have sparked the development of new queue visualisation and management technologies that are cutting hours, even days, off international passenger and freight journeys. At the westernmost end of the 2,019km (1,250 mile) Mexico–US frontier, two parallel crossings between Tijuana, in the former country, and the border city of San Diego,
  • A new beginning for travel information, based on users' needs
    February 3, 2012
    Despite its name, the EU's forthcoming SUNSET project could represent a new beginning for travel information services. Here, Susan Grant-Muller and Frances Hodgson from the Institute for Transport Studies at the University of Leeds detail a project which is intended to exert a greater influence on network users' travel habits