Skip to main content

Vinci exhibiting at Intertraffic with ALICE mobile enforcement

Vinci Energies is a foremost company in the field of services for energy and information technologies. For over four decades, the firm has been providing authorities and operators with its know-how in design consulting, engineering and maintenance for motorways, tunnels and bridges, toll systems, traffic management, urban roads and parking.
April 6, 2016 Read time: 1 min
8385 Vinci Energies is a foremost company in the field of services for energy and information technologies. For over four decades, the firm has been providing authorities and operators with its know-how in design consulting, engineering and maintenance for motorways, tunnels and bridges, toll systems, traffic management, urban roads and parking.


Part of the Vinci Group, Vinci Energies’ products include ALICE (Autonomous Lidar Concept for Enforcement). This is aimed at securing and protecting high risk work zones. ALICE can be installed without a fixed power supply so is autonomous and easily moveable.

Related Content

  • July 30, 2013
    Virginia presses ahead with tunnels upgrade despite tolls challenge
    David Crawford reviews current developments and legal/financial issues facing tunnel management in Virginia. This autumn the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) in the US will defend its plan to introduce tolling on the Elizabeth River tunnels linking the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth in the State’s Hampton Roads area. The tolling, which is due to start from February 2014, will be examined by the State’s Supreme Court later this year. The anticipated toll income, along with loans and bonds, is
  • October 10, 2018
    Just Zip it! Lindsay takes to the road
    Greater vehicle connectivity is going to have huge implications for traffic management. David Arminas climbed aboard a Lindsay Road Zipper to see what this might mean in future As vice president of barrier specialist QMB Canada, Marc-Andre Seguin is sanguine about the future for moveable barriers. On the one hand, it looks good. The oft-stated advantage of moveable barriers is that the systems are cheaper to install than adding a lane or two to a highway or bridge. Directional changes to lanes can boost
  • February 3, 2012
    Progress of ICT transport research projects
    Juhani Jääskeläinen, head of the ICT for Transport Unit, DG Information Society and Media, European Commission, details the results of Call 4 for research projects in ICT for transport. Since the closure of the call and evaluation process during the summer of last year the European Commission (EC) has been negotiating and signing contracts with projects which were selected from proposals submitted to Call 4 of the 7th Framework Programme (FP7) in the area of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) fo
  • January 5, 2016
    Will mobile apps kick-start mobility pricing?
    Thomas Hallauer from Ptolemus believes trials of connected road charging services will show the pay per mile concept will go much further than previously thought. Drivers are progressively becoming directly connected to the transport infrastructure and while the methods are changing, the innovation is really in the models rather than the technology.