Skip to main content

Siemens gets the green light in Reykjavik

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
January 31, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
1134 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 with onboard units. Similarly, the local bus operator will be equipping around 120 vehicles.

Sitraffic Stream - Simple Tracking Realtime Application for Managing traffic lights and passenger information – uses GPS captured by an onboard unit to calculate a vehicle's position to the nearest 5m and transmit the information to the control centre. When available virtual signalling points are passed, the control centre switches the lights to green. As soon as the vehicle has crossed the intersection, the lights revert to normal operation.

Until now, the only prioritisation solutions available for buses and emergency vehicles were of the expensive analogue variety: too costly for smaller towns and communities. But Sitraffic Stream is completely digital and requires only a small onboard unit with an integrated GPS and GPRS antenna in the vehicle. Unlike conventional systems, the cost of Sitraffic Stream for communities is manageable, as expensive roadside installations are not required.

Additionally, the position data transmitted provides up-to-date bus departure times at stops in real time. This is a real bonus for passengers as the punctuality of public transport is improved and buses run more reliably. What's more, CO2 pollution in the cities is reduced as buses don't get held up in traffic as much and thus simultaneously offer a real alternative to private transport. The fire service also benefits from Sitraffic Stream as in the event of an emergency, fire trucks no longer have to go through red lights at intersections.

In Böblingen, a town to the south of Stuttgart, Germany, Sitraffic Stream has been successfully prioritising fire trucks and speeding up public transport since 2014. As part of a pilot project, signalling points were set up at four intersections and onboard units installed in two fire trucks. Boblingen has since rolled out more Sitraffic Stream units across the town.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Exclusive Americas licensee of OLEV technology
    May 2, 2012
    Boston-Massachusetts headquartered OLEV Technologies has been appointed the exclusive north and south American licensee responsible for commercialising the OLEV (On Line Electric Vehicle) technology, a zero emission green transportation technology, invented at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)."OLEV technology is a proven, safe and cost-effective green transportation solution that can be deployed today," said Dr. Hikyu Lee, president & CEO of OLEV Technologies.
  • Carry on Movin’ On - Michelin’s mobility event
    October 15, 2018
    Many of the great and the good in the global mobility sector gathered at this year’s Movin’ On event in Montreal. Measured regulation of technologies and safety issues were major themes, reports David Arminas Autonomous vehicles, platooning, smart intersections and safety – these were the talking points over two and half days of the Movin’ On event in Montreal. Everyone in the mobility sector is at the same point, trying to see what mobility will look like in the future. Apparent at the event was just
  • Tunnel construction benefits from improved visibility
    November 14, 2012
    Major new tunnel construction projects will, on completion, help secure more reliable journey times for hundreds of thousands of people across the world. Meanwhile, as Guy Woodford reports, leading ITS solution companies have been providing vital equipment for major road tunnels The Martina Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM), a 4,500tonne Herrenknecht Earth Pressure Balance Shield said to have a world record diameter of 15.55m, has required just under a year to build the first of two tunnel tubes for the 2.5km lon
  • Germany builds its first major PPI autobahn project
    July 7, 2015
    Rebuilding of one of the oldest motorways in Germany is testing out the possibilities for public-private project road construction reports Adrian Greeman A freshly renovated section of the A8 Autobahn in southern Germany will be watched with some interest this summer as traffic begins driving along its rebuilt carriageway and additional third lanes. That is not because of any special road features, other than a distinctive reddish colour to its concrete surface, but because it is a first fullscale public