Skip to main content

Vysionics helps Scottish watchdog A9 Safety Group win CIHT award

An installation of SPECS3 average speed cameras from Vysionics has helped a Scottish road safety watchdog win an award The A9 Safety Group, which monitors traffic, accidents and driving habits and conditions along the A9 trunk road, picked up the John Smart Road Safety Award from the CIHT - Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation. The CIHT is concerned with planning, design, construction, maintenance and operation of land-based transport systems and infrastructure. A9 Safety won the award
September 16, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
An installation of SPECS3 average speed cameras from Vysionics has helped a Scottish road safety watchdog win an award

The A9 Safety Group, which monitors traffic, accidents and driving habits and conditions along the A9 trunk road, picked up the John Smart Road Safety Award from the CIHT - Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation. The CIHT is concerned with planning, design, construction, maintenance and operation of land-based transport systems and infrastructure.

A9 Safety won the award for a range of interventions along more than 200km of carriageway, including the implementation of 50 SPECS3 cameras.

The A9 SPECS3 installation has been in operation since October but it is too early to report on casualty analysis, according to A9 Safety. However, indicators appear to show that drivers have improved the way they use the route that stretches from Dunblane to Thurso. Since the installation went live, fewer than 10 tickets have been issued per day on traffic volumes of 24,000 vehicles. An average of 142,000 vehicles use the A9 every day, Overall speeding has dropped from 1-in-3 to 1-in-15 journeys. As well, excessive speeding, meaning 17kph and more over the limit, is down by 95%.

Also, a survey showed that 70% of drivers feel safer than before the cameras were installed. The SPECS3 cameras are mounted on highly visible columns, typically at 5km intervals, covering both single and dual carriageway sections. A9 Safety said they act as a regular reminder that the route is being monitored along its length, resulting in more considered driving behaviour.

3957 Vysionics, a UK-based ANPR (automatic number plate recognition) and average speed enforcement company, were acquired by 3987 Jenoptik, an enforcement technology group, in November. SPECS average speed enforcement cameras have been in operation since 2000 with more than 70 permanent sites and 300 temporary roadworks installations.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Evonik’s top marks for Colombian tourist highway solution
    May 15, 2014
    Leading German road marking product manufacturer Evonik Industries has played a key role in improving safety on a popular Colombian tourist highway, as Guy Woodford reports Bearing the name of the memorable peacemaker governor of Antioquia, the Guillermo Gaviria Correa road, located between the Colombian municipalities of Medellin and San Jerónimo, connects Medellin to the Uraba Gulf part of the Caribbean Sea. In operation since 2007, the road, in combination with the Fernando Gómez Martínez tunnel –
  • Speed limiters will limit fatalities, says the TRL
    July 29, 2019
    The soon-to-be mandatory speed limiters on vehicles in the European Union will make all safety other features more efficient, according the UK-based Transport Research Laboratory. In March the European Parliament passed a law that safety features such as intelligent speed assistance and advanced emergency-braking system must be installed in new vehicles from May 2022. They form part of the EU’s new suite of safety measures. TRL, which provided input for the European Commission regarding the formulatio
  • Temporary ProLight solar lighting illuminates the UK’s A14 upgrade
    January 9, 2019
    The A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon improvement scheme has become the first UK project to use temporary solar - instead of diesel - lighting. The A14 is the UK’s biggest road construction project with a budget of nearly US$2 billion to upgrade 34km of trunk road between Cambridge and Huntingdon with completion set for December 2020. The A14 Integrated Delivery Team, working on behalf of project client Highways England, is the largest user in the country of year-round temporary solar trailer-transported lights.
  • Relief road eases Carlisle centre
    December 11, 2012
    The number of Heavy Goods Vehicles travelling through Carlisle’s city centre is estimated to have been reduced by more than a third since the new multi-million euro Carlisle Northern Development Route opened in February 2012. Information from a network of 20 permanent and temporary traffic counters around the city showing ‘before and after’ CNDR road usage is said to be starting to build a more meaningful picture of the impact the new road has had on Carlisle. It shows a marked reduction in both cars and HG