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

  • Internet-connected cars their functionality and safety challenges
    February 27, 2013
    Internet-connected cars are poised to flood the market in the near future. Pete Goldin considers the functionality they offer, the technology they use and the challenge they represent in terms of driver safety. Many vehicles on the road today offer some sort of inter­net connectivity and experts agree that this capability will become a competi­tive differentiator in the automotive industry in the next few years. The era of the digital vehicle, it seems, has started. “We clearly see that cars in the near f
  • Is machine vision the future of enforcement?
    January 25, 2012
    Leading automated enforcement system suppliers talk about how they see machine vision technology affecting the sector in the coming years
  • Europe’s road safety record suffers as austerity bites hard, traffic police chiefs are told at TISPOL 2017
    March 7, 2018
    Europe’s leading traffic police chiefs are struggling with the challenge of how best to manage the region’s road network in an era of austerity. Things are changing fast, and not for the better, reports Geoff Hadwick. Europe’s road safety record is under threat. Police budgets are being slashed, staff numbers are falling and a long-term trend towards ever-fewer road deaths has ground to a halt. The line on the graph has flat-lined. Does Europe’s road network face a far more dangerous future? Lower and
  • Keeping a watching brief over traffic flows
    March 11, 2015
    Monitoring traffic flows is set to become an even bigger challengebut a revolution in camera technology can help, as Patrik Anderson explains. By 2025 almost 60% of the world’s population will live in urban areas and in those cities there will be an estimated 6.2 billion private motorised trips every day. In order to manage this level of traffic growth, traffic management centres (TMCs) will need to both increase their monitoring capabilities and be able to detect traffic problems quickly, efficiently and r