Skip to main content

Safer cycling with Siemens

Siemens has developed a new cycle detection system that can trigger signalling and be used to monitor user numbers. The novel WiMag Cycle Detection package uses in-ground, low-power, wireless detectors and microwave radar technology to identify and count bicycles of all types, including those made of carbon fibre. The solution complements the company’s existing WiMag, loop and radar detection solutions.
September 15, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
1134 Siemens has developed a new cycle detection system that can trigger signalling and be used to monitor user numbers. The novel WiMag Cycle Detection package uses in-ground, low-power, wireless detectors and microwave radar technology to identify and count bicycles of all types, including those made of carbon fibre. The solution complements the company’s existing WiMag, loop and radar detection solutions.

The firm said that the WiMag Cycle Detectors differentiate between cycles and motorised vehicles and can distinguish objects based on their speed. Bicycles do not need to pass directly over the detector in order to be identified according to the company. The system allows road authorities to determine accurately how many cyclists are using a specific route so as to see whether more capacity is required.

The system uses a low-power wireless transmitter/receiver and a dedicated battery to transmit detection data to an associated access point or repeater. WiMag Cycle Detection can be used to detect the presence of bicycles, provide count information and enable traffic signalling phasing to be tailored based on cycle demand.

The installation of the WiMag Cycle Detection System is simple and requires coring the appropriate diameter hole in the carriageway and fixing the detector in place with a dedicated epoxy resin, eliminating the need for extensive ducts. The system can be used in conjunction with the Siemens WiMag Vehicle Detection System, sharing the same communications infrastructure and using access points and repeaters to establish two-way wireless links to detectors within the system.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Siemens gets the green light in Reykjavik
    January 31, 2017
    Siemens has agreed to supply its satellite-based prioritisation system Sitraffic Stream to the Icelandic capital, Reykjavik Reykjavik and the Icelandic Road and Coastal administration (Vegagerd rikisins) are sharing the system that ensures traffic lights automatically turn green for emergency and urban public transport vehicles at road intersections. The system has been installed at six intersections in the centre of the capital. Over the coming months, around 50 fire trucks and ambulances will be fitted
  • Work zone safety with SRL's REMOS
    August 11, 2025
    REMOS allows one person off-site to manage several sites simultaneously, efficiently making interventions to prevent and eliminate bottlenecks.
  • SafeZone from Siemens ITS delivers safer roads in Sussex, UK
    May 18, 2018
    Two SafeZone average speed schemes installed by Siemens in Brighton and Hastings, UK, are recording almost 100% speed compliance. The cameras have been deployed along the seafronts at Brighton and Hastings. The schemes use a combination of visible and invisible infrared lighting which is more sensitive to the effects on local residents and the environment. It’s the first time such schemes have been installed in the county. “Using a collection of cameras along Brighton seafront on Marine Parade and a furt
  • Keeping tunnels safe
    July 20, 2012
    In 2006 Traficon won the first project on the world's first artificial island, the iconic Palm Jumeirah in Dubai, to provide incident detection and traffic data collection along the main arterial road. The technology used included 18 detection units and was won with Siemens Building Technology. The company also won the contract for the tunnel: 26 detection units, in cooperation with Japanese Kinden Corporation. "The Palm Jumeirah vehicular tunnel is in fact the third tunnel (the others are the airport tunne