Skip to main content

Smart cities catch up with Nedap innovation

With the “smart city” concept gathering pace, people ask Nedap whether its range of sensors is a response to the trend.
April 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Lars Lenselink of Nedap
With the “smart city” concept gathering pace, people ask 3838 Nedap whether its range of sensors is a response to the trend.


“Just the opposite,” said Nedap Mobility Solutions’ Lars Lenselink at Intertraffic 2016 yesterday. “It’s more a question of smart cities catching up with our smart products that are well-established and used pretty-much worldwide.”

In fact, the company is at Intertraffic 2016 celebrating 10 years of its Sensit sensor technology now installed in hundreds of cities worldwide.

The anniversary will be marked with special “birthday” cakes on the company’s stand and announcements on a range of product improvements.

The parking sensors’ embedded batteries have had their life extended from seven years to ten.

While, Nedap has penetrated most markets worldwide it is looking at new applications for its technology. A promising avenue is large out-of-town retail outlets and it is working with Ikea to use parking sensors to help improve the customer experience.

“Companies like Ikea are constantly looking at ways to make customers feel better. The experience really begins when the customer parks their car so if you make things more efficient when they begin their visit you get things off to a good start. We see a lot of potential in this area.”

Nedap continues to explore Low Power Long Range Networks (LoRa) technologies. Last month Nedap, together with KPN, performed live tests with LoRa modules in Rotterdam. The quality of the KPN’s local LoRa network was optimised to the highest quality of LoRA networks today and should provide the best quality of service.

Lenselink said that work was still ongoing and that a LoRa-based Sensit parking sensor was likely towards the end of the year. “We think there may be some kind of a hybrid solution.” he said.

Nedap is also using Intertraffic 2016 to launch MOOV, which it claims is the world’s first access control system specifically designed for vehicle entrances in cities, industrial estates and parking facilities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Smartphone solution for parking performance
    March 31, 2017
    Automated parking offers optimised space utilisation and fewer damage complaints as David Crawford discovers. As cars become smarter, technology designed to make parking them more straightforward is developing in parallel. In turn, it is becoming clear that the places where vehicles spend much of their time will need to respond – more comprehensively than by supporting established aids such as smartphone-based parking location and reservation, or payment for time used.
  • Debating a cost-effective means of road user charging
    July 20, 2012
    Does GPS/GNSS-based technology provide a cost-effective means of charging or tolling on a national or international level, or are the issues pertaining to effective enforcement an obstacle. Here, leading equipment manufacturers debate the issue.
  • Manchester seeks smart but not selective transport solutions
    January 25, 2018
    Smarter transport relies on better communications both with travellers and between transport providers. Andrew Williams reports. Inrix’s prediction that the cost of traffic congestion will rise by 63% to £21bn per year by 2030 clearly illustrates that, in addition to the ongoing inconvenience and inefficiency, ongoing gridlock is a significant drain on the economy. It is against this backdrop that a Cisco-led consortium has launched CitySpire, a smart transport programme that uses location-based services a
  • Whitney Nottage: "Everyone in our industry should be advocates for ITS!"
    May 14, 2025
    Q-Free’s Whitney Nottage talks to Adam Hill about the importance of getting youngsters enthused about engineering – and about how the ITS sector could do with more collaboration