Skip to main content

Tattile shows speed enforcement, launches next-generation ANPR

Leading Italian ITS company Tattile is being tight-lipped about a world launch it is planning for Intertraffic Amsterdam 2016. However, the company promises that the new camera range it has designed and developed from the ground up is genuinely next-generation.
February 29, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

Leading Italian ITS company 592 Tattile is being tight-lipped about a world launch it is planning for Intertraffic Amsterdam 2016. However, the company promises that the new camera range it has designed and developed from the ground up is genuinely next-generation.

“We are talking about a totally new ANPR range using technology that is revolutionary, not just for Tattile but for the whole sector,” says Tattile’s Massimiliano Cominelli. “To date, there are no cameras with the features and performance of what we will unveil at Intertraffic.”

Housed within a totally new, futuristic design that complements the current needs of urban design, the new ANPR camera range will feature a context picture plus night vision as well as advanced software for vehicle detection and classification. According to Cominelli, this latest innovation from Tattile has a wide range of applications from parking to free-flow tolling and enforcement.

Tattile says the world launch of the new range will take place on its stand at Intertraffic on the opening day of the event, 5 April, at 10.00am.

The company will also be showing the Vega Speed, the innovative new speed enforcement camera Tattile launched just a few months ago. Its main application areas are Instant Speed Enforcement and Average Speed Enforcement. In addition to being so light and compact, a key feature of the device is the level of integration that has been achieved.

Related Content

  • New data shows average speed enforcement halves A9’s casualty rates
    January 26, 2016
    New data published by transport Scotland indicates that accident and casualty rates on the A9 have fallen dramatically in the first year of operation of the new average speed cameras. From the beginning of November 2014 to October 2015, two fewer people have been killed and 16 fewer people have been seriously injured between Dunblane and Inverness, while the number of ‘fatal and serious accidents’ between the two towns is down by almost 59 per cent, with ‘fatal and serious casualties’ down by approximat
  • Pilomat improves road block surface product
    March 21, 2018
    Italian firm Pilomat is showing off the latest version of its surface-mounted hydraulic road blocker at Intertraffic. Designed to increase security at access points to residential, commercial and industrial areas, the Road Blocker Surface has been made more functional and safe with “aesthetical and mechanical improvements”, the company says. It is now “compact and easy to integrate into any urban space”. The first prototype was displayed at the last edition of Intertraffic two years ago. It previously ha
  • New York to pilot cordon-based congestion charging
    March 16, 2012
    From 2009, if all goes to plan, New York will run a three-year cordon-based congestion charging pilot - the first in the US. Upon accession, US Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters signalled her intention to continue her predecessor Norman Mineta's initiative to specifically target road congestion. And, with initiatives such as the US Department of Transportation's (USDOT's) Urban Partnership Program actively promoting tolling as a part of a compound solution to the problem, the way was opened for the co
  • New York to pilot cordon-based congestion charging
    March 16, 2012
    From 2009, if all goes to plan, New York will run a three-year cordon-based congestion charging pilot - the first in the US. Upon accession, US Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters signalled her intention to continue her predecessor Norman Mineta's initiative to specifically target road congestion. And, with initiatives such as the US Department of Transportation's (USDOT's) Urban Partnership Program actively promoting tolling as a part of a compound solution to the problem, the way was opened for the co