Skip to main content

Siemens designs data communications solution for UK city

Leeds City Council in the UK has placed a contract with Siemens to provide a new city-wide IP-Communications network that will initially be used for a new urban traffic management control (UTMC) system and offers future expansion capability to support both CCTV as well as the extension of UTMC to more than 1,000 sites.
March 19, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Leeds City Council in the UK has placed a contract with 1134 Siemens to provide a new city-wide IP-Communications network that will initially be used for a new urban traffic management control (UTMC) system and offers future expansion capability to support both CCTV as well as the extension of UTMC to more than 1,000 sites.

The UTMC system in Leeds controls around 400 signals in Leeds and Calderdale and is key to keeping traffic moving through the busy city. Reliable communications are crucial, but to date this has come at a significant cost in terms of fixed communication lines. This project will maximise the benefits of new IP communication and IP compatible traffic signal equipment.

According to Gary Cox, product sales manager at Siemens, the proposed solution is extremely cost effective to install and offers considerable flexibility and scalability. With the ongoing cost of ownership being a key factor, the chosen technologies offer both reliability and reduced operating costs. ‘We are confident that the design has the potential to reduce future revenue costs by more than two thirds of the current revenue spend,’ he said.

Using specialist suppliers in the north-east of England, Siemens has contracted Leeds based 4035 SCD for new DSL based circuits and fibre optic equipment and 4038 IDT for the manufacture and supply of wireless equipment.

The project will make use of the latest advances in the communications industry. A private core of DSL circuits will provide the backbone to the solution with 3G and wireless technologies being used where the detailed design determines the required performance criteria can be achieved.

Siemens started surveying the traffic signal sites in February, with completion of the 400 site programme expected in January 2013.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New traffic solutions for the UK
    July 15, 2015
    Two major developments being introduced will help optimise traffic flow on routes carrying high volumes of vehicles/day. An installation of Flexicon’s flexible conduit will help keep the traffic flowing on one of the busiest sections of the M6 motorway through Birmingham by protecting power and data cabling for overhead gantries and CCTV cameras. On behalf of Highways England, who is implementing a hard shoulder running scheme between junctions 5 and 8, contractor’s Carillion is using the 63mm diameter L
  • Siemens launches next generation ANPR camera Sicore ll
    May 14, 2018
    Siemens has launched Sicore ll, its next generation ANPR – automatic number plate recognition - camera platform. The launch took place during Traffex 2017 at the NEC exhibition centre in Birmingham, UK, last month. Siemens said that Sicore ll - based on more the company’s 30 years' experience in vision detection and analytics – is robust, reliable and built to last. Sicore ll is for average speed control and enforcement, low emission or clean air zones and access control. “The new Sicore ll platform is
  • 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
  • The era of workzone data
    July 4, 2018
    Portable work zone messaging is now integral - not an add-on - when it comes to safety on large-scale highway projects. Andrew Williams* reports. Portable work zone ITS solutions have emerged in recent years as important flexible tools for managing major roadwork projects, from new-build to upgrades. They effectively ensure traffic disruption is kept to a minimum and lives can be saved. As such, the technology forms a central component of a major €1.7 billion project in the southern English county of Cambr