Skip to main content

Q-Free solution for Glasgow

Q-Free has won a four-year deal to set up its HI-TRAC CMU bicycle detection system including activated warning signs at 16 locations in Glasgow, Scotland.
October 27, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
© Jaume Juncadella | Dreamstime.com

Flashing signs will warn drivers that cyclists are approaching an upcoming road junction or travelling in the cycleway ahead. This is a useful safety feature where a vehicle driver’s forward visibility is compromised by intrusive street furniture or buildings.

For the HI-TRAC CMU bicycle detection solution, in-road piezo-electric sensors are located around 25m away from every road leading to a major junction. When the sensors detect a cyclist approaching, they trigger flashing lights on triangular warning signs telling drivers to be aware. A location can have up to three warning signs.

Safety is seen as the main barrier to people cycling more frequently, explained Christine Francis, head of technical services for Glasgow City Council. “Improving cyclist safety is a cornerstone of our efforts to promote a shift to more sustainable forms of transportation.”

Since 2016 Glasgow has been trying to improve cyclists’ safety by adopting "an integrated system that gives priority to cyclists at signalised crossings”, said Francis. “Glasgow City Council was the first local authority in the UK to install cycle activated electronic signage on the road network.”

The sites were selected based on historical data and the potential to prevent incursions between bikes and other vehicles. The system is also being deployed at pedestrian underpasses to warn cyclists to slow down and be cautious of pedestrians. The accuracy of the Q-Free equipment has also led to the replacement of Glasgow's suite of induction loop cycle counters. The project team says that findings from an early installation at a junction show vehicle and cycle conflicts were reduced from 17% to 8%. The number of vehicles failing to yield to oncoming cyclists fell from 35% to 22%.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • TISPOL Conference: autonomous vehicles high on safety agenda
    February 2, 2017
    Safety and autonomous vehicles exercised the minds of some of Europe’s senior police officers at the recent TISPOL European Traffic Police Network Conference in the UK. The European Union looks like missing its target of halving the number of people killed on its roads each year by 2020. Just when European police forces are trying to get back on target, along comes the autonomous vehicle with all its inherent safety issues.
  • LEDs shed new light on cost savings according to Harvard Technology
    October 26, 2016
    Russell Fletcher* from global lighting solutions provider Harvard Technology explains how LEDs and wireless controls are changing the lighting industry. The lighting controls market is set to double by 2024, according to Navigant Research, a US-based global market research and consulting team that analyses clean technology markets. The driver is technological advancements which bring impressive results through retrofitting combined LED and wireless control systems.
  • Pan-European road safety and transport programme
    February 1, 2013
    A major programme that will boost road safety and transport efficiency is now being developed jointly in seven European cities. The authorities in Bordeaux, Copenhagen, Eindhoven-Helmond, Newcastle, Thessaloniki, Verona and Vigo have joined forces with the aim of improving road safety, increasing energy efficiency and reducing level of congestions for road transport. The city authorities will work along with industrial partners to jointly implement three cooperative services for forward collision warnings,
  • Smarter road crossings with the Smart Crossing from Umberllium
    November 15, 2017
    Urban design technologists Umbrellium said that it has created the Smart Crossing, a pedestrian crossing that adjusts its lines and colours according to the situation. The crossing, a prototype, was developed for UK insurance company Direct Line in response to research which highlighted the dangers for people, cyclists and vehicle drivers at pedestrian crossings. Research by Road Safety Analysis, a designer of highway safety programmes and services, noted that there were more than 29,000 casualties on or n