Skip to main content

Aximum’s multi-faceted global traffic control appeal

Aximum, part of the Colas Group, is a French firm with a major global presence in traffic management, road safety equipment, road markings and vertical signs markets, has been highly active across its core business areas. The company says it has significantly expanded its presence in traffic management in the Middle East in recent years thanks to innovative solutions and quality products. Aximum has a lot of references in Oman, Dubai and Abu Dhabi. In Abu Dhabi, the largest state in the United Arab Emira
September 26, 2013 Read time: 3 mins

Aximum, part of the 184 Colas Group, is a French firm with a major global presence in traffic management, road safety equipment, road markings and vertical signs markets, has been highly active across its core business areas.

The company says it has significantly expanded its presence in traffic management in the Middle East in recent years thanks to innovative solutions and quality products. 164 Aximum has a lot of references in Oman, Dubai and Abu Dhabi. In Abu Dhabi, the largest state in the United Arab Emirates, 1,700 of the firm’s Aluxe D300 traffic lights are being used by the city of Abu Dhabi’s transport authority. Aximum has adapted its Aluxe D300 models to local needs by incorporating pedestrian signals with US-style pictograms. The traffic lights are also adapted to meet local technical standards with regard to energy consumption, using specific green light emitting diodes (LEDs) for a novel effect and T-shaped bracket fixings.

In Russia, Aximum recently installed more than 300m of single lane plastic dividers at the KM71 toll station on the M4 motorway near Moscow. The new plastic dividers can be moved from distance with a winch, far safer for road workers who had to move the previous plastic dividers by hand. The Aximum installation was said to be completed in record time and without obstructing traffic. The new extended single lane plastic dividers are said to be ensuring a better flow of traffic at and near to the toll station.

The installation of Aximum’s prefabricated Rocaline® bands, using interstitial bitumen strip Bitufix® to ensure long-lasting hold, is said by the company to have broken years of deadlock on how best to mark roads in the Belgium city of Liege.

All previous road markings tested in Liege, using different plastic, water-based paint or thermoplastic prefabricated solutions, were said by Aximum to have disappeared too quickly.
The innovative and patented Rocaline system, together with Bitufix has also been used in Paris for a number of years.

In the United States, and after successful applications in Texas and Virginia, Aximum subsidiary SES has installed more than 40 of its variable message signs in the Atlantic Coast state of Delaware.

SES says its client needed to replace its ageing and obsolete VMS with technologically advanced models to meet latest technologies but has to work within a limited budget.

The US market-specific SES VMS solution meets NTCIP communications protocol, NEMA, character height and definition adapted standard and able to completely replace or, alternatively, modernise an existing sign. The second option is said to have proven popular with budget-conscious Delaware state officials. In order to limit the impact on traffic, each VMS panel is pre-assembled in the factory and can be installed in just a few hours.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Estonia surveys major roads with a RetroTek-M retroreflectometer
    May 22, 2019
    During the past two years, Estonia’s Road Administration has clocked up 4,021km during a retroreflectivity project on all main state roads and on basic roads. Estonia’s Road Traffic Development Department of the Estonian Road Administration has been working with ERC Consulting to gather retroreflectivity data on road markings on all main state roads and basic roads. The work has shown that out of 1,609km of main state roads, 20% had problems. The reflective effect is created by glass beads on the surf
  • Traffic control solution manufacturers win key project works
    September 26, 2013
    Traffic control system manufacturers have recently supplied some of their cutting-edge technology to major projects in Europe. Meanwhile, in southern Asia, another leading firm in the sector is helping reduce chronic traffic congestion in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta. Guy Woodford reports Solutions supplied by Siemens Mobility & Logistics (M&L) are helping the Rijkswaterstaat improve traffic conditions at the Coentunnel in Amsterdam, one of the most heavily used traffic arteries in the Netherlands, used
  • Contacts awarded for new UAE road links
    October 8, 2013
    Contracts for two major road projects in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) worth a combined US$2.01 billion (AED 7.40 billion) have been awarded. The contracts have been granted to Al Jaber Transport and General Contracting, Ghantoot Transport and General Contracting, Al Geemi & Partners Contracting Company, Bin Hafeez General Contracting Establishment, Delma Engineering, Larsen and Toubro, Abu Dhabi Salini Construction and Tristar for Engineering. One of the road projects will connect Dubai with Abu Dhabi,
  • New marking technologies being developed
    June 30, 2014
    Innovative roadmarking technologies will increase productivity, improve conspicuity in poor conditions and offer increased wear life - Mike Woof writes. Major advances have been seen in roadmarking systems now being offered on the market. More sophisticated machinery will increase productivity and quality when installing markings, while new systems will also last longer in use. In addition, smart technologies can detect wear and provide highway authorities with an accurate picture of network safety, at comp