Skip to main content

Verizon turns street lights into smart city hubs

Verizon is touting its light sensing platform, showing how ITS intelligence can live and be managed inside street lights. “We’ve essentially turned the light pole into a network device that can interact with a variety of modular sensors and push data to the cloud,” said Destah Owens, a solutions architect for Verizon’s Smart Community group.
June 8, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
© F11photo | Dreamstime.com

1984 Verizon is touting its light sensing platform, showing how ITS intelligence can live and be managed inside street lights.

“We’ve essentially turned the light pole into a network device that can interact with a variety of modular sensors and push data to the cloud,” said Destah Owens, a solutions architect for Verizon’s Smart Community group.

Basic functionality of the light sensing technology allows cities to adjust ambient lighting on demand or on a variable schedule - such as when a convention is in town or other entertainment event. However, Owens said that cities are really excited about the modular ability to add other sensors - essentially using the street light as the smart city hub. Video analytics, parking enforcement, motion sensors and other sensors can be added to the light pole - collecting vital traffic, enforcement and mobility information and sending it to the cloud where a variety of stakeholders can access and analyse it for many different applications.

“It really allows stakeholders to figure out what is going in their city and figure out how they can increase mobility, provide safety or make any number of changes,” Owens said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Smart Spanish city trials cell-based traffic management
    November 7, 2013
    David Crawford reports on an urban electronic nervous system. The northern Spanish city of Santander – historically a port - is now an emerging technology showcase attracting global attention as a prototype for a medium-sized smart city of the future. In a move to determine the optimal use of available data, it is creating a de-facto experimental laboratory for sensor and mobile phone-based urban traffic management and environmental monitoring innovations.
  • CES 2020: ITS does Vegas
    March 3, 2020
    Keen to find out what the future holds, 170,000 people gathered in Las Vegas for CES 2020 to see 20,000 product debuts and 4,400 exhibitors... and ITS International was there too (All images: CES®)
  • TM 2.0 boost TMC data feed and driver influence
    November 15, 2017
    TM 2.0 views connected vehicles and V2I as two-way communications channels, benefitting traffic management and drivers, as Alan Dron discovers. As connected vehicles are progressively rolled out there will come a point at which traffic managers and traffic management centres (TMCs) will have to gear up to cope with a rapidly-evolving road scenario. The TM 2.0 Platform (see box) is promoting a concept of new-generation traffic management (which carries the same TM 2.0 title) and is studying how future T
  • Smarter transport remains key to smart cities
    January 9, 2018
    Colin Sowman looks at some of the challenges and solutions that will provide enhanced transport efficiency in tomorrow’s smarter cities. However you define a ‘smart city’, one of the key ingredients will be an efficient transport system. As most governments and city authorities face financial constraints, incremental improvements in the existing systems is the most likely way forward. In London, new trains and signalling are improving the capacity of the Underground but that then reveals previously