Skip to main content

Yunex creates a green wave in Darmstadt

Yunex’s assistant, incorporated into Darmstadt’s DAnalytics project, will inform road users via the Signal2X smartphone app the correct speed to travel to ride the green wave.
By David Arminas April 27, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Drivers, cyclists, buses and trams receive the green time forecasts in real time via the Signal2X smartphone app, which was presented for the first time at the recent Intertraffic 2022 Amsterdam

Yunex Traffic is installing a traffic light phase assistant in Darmstadt, Germany, which generates real-time traffic data to create a green wave for traffic flow.

Yunex’s assistant, which will be incorporated into the city’s DAnalytics project, will inform road users via the company’s recently launched Signal2X smartphone app, about the optimal travel speed they should maintain to ride the green wave.

A so-called green wave occurs when a driver travelling at a specific speed along an urban road sees, in the distance, a progressive cascading of green lights at intersections. The idea is to coordinate the traffic lights to allow for continuous traffic flow over several intersections in one main direction without a driver having to stop and wait at red lights. By not stopping, there is a reduction in noise, vehicle emissions and energy use which creates a healthier environment along the route and nearby city areas.

In practical use, only a group of cars - known as a platoon, the size of which is defined by the signal times - can use the green wave before the lights change Another green wave is then created for vehicles coming from other directions.

Yunex said that its assistant will help improve air quality in Darmstadt and increases the quality of life in the city.

In order to reduce pollutants and emissions and shorten travel times, Darmstadt launched the Darmstadt Analytics – Danalytics – project in 2018. The aim of the project funded by the BMDV - Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport  - is to exploit the possibilities of big data analyses in the field of traffic management so that road users and the environment benefit equally.

“Our multimodal traffic light phase assistant ensures this with smart technologies and thus forms a central element in a sustainable traffic ecosystem," said Stefan Eckert, a managing director responsible for sales and project management at Yunex Traffic Germany.

Yunex said that a central element of Darmstadt’s DAnalytics traffic management is its multimodal traffic light phase assistant. The company was recently commissioned by Darmstadt through a European-wide public tender to set up the assistant. Smart sensors and other components for traffic light coordination will be tested in a cooperative real-world laboratory (public transport/car/bicycle/pedestrian traffic) by this autumn and then implemented throughout the city.

The traffic light phase assistant uses intelligent algorithms to calculate the optimal speed for driving the green wave. The reliability of the prognosis is up to 99.8%, according to Yunex. It will account for current traffic conditions and sudden events in the calculations.

Drivers, cyclists, buses and trams receive the green time forecasts in real time via the Signal2X smartphone app, which was presented for the first time at the recent Intertraffic 2022 Amsterdam, a major international trade fair for traffic technology. The app will be available free of charge for smartphones with iOS and Android operating systems in the App Store and, for the first time in Germany, also for Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

In the long term, the speed recommendations should not only be available via the app, but also integrated into common navigation systems via a cloud system.

In addition, data from the traffic light phase assistant is continuously fed back to the DAnalytics analytical platform to create a database for both the central traffic computer and for traffic planners to enable environmentally sensitive traffic management.

Yunex Traffic, a separately managed company of Siemens Mobility, said it plans to roll out the system to other cities and countries. Its intelligent mobility solutions are being used in other major cities, including Dubai, London, Berlin, Bogota and Miami.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Safer cycling in urban areas
    August 1, 2017
    Global Traffic Technologies (GTT) is helping to make journeys for cyclists safer, smoother, and faster by using existing infrastructure. The firm offers its Canoga 9004 system to detect and react to bikes at intersections. This allows the traffic detection system to recognise both motor vehicles and bicycles. The Canoga card reacts quickly enough to give cyclists a green light without needing to slow down or wait at the intersection; or worse yet, navigate a red light.
  • VIDEO: Telstra drone LIDAR maps Melbourne’s EastLink Mullum Tunnel
    April 13, 2018
    One of the applications for LIDAR is to make high resolution 3-D maps. Self-driving cars are pre-loaded with a LIDAR map of the trials area in which they are permitted to fully self-drive themselves. The cars also have their own LIDAR scanner which captures a real-time LIDAR view of the vehicle’s surroundings. The fully autonomous driving system within these prototype cars compares the real-time LIDAR view against the pre-loaded LIDAR map to significantly increase the accuracy of their self-positioning
  • Traffic management software tools
    March 5, 2012
    A joint development project between Delcan Corporation and Intelligent Devices Incorporated (IDI) has resulted in the sophisticated Intelligent NETworks product. This is an integrated product that combines the IDI Intelligent Control NTCIP system with the Delcan advanced transportation applications of NETworks. The system can be linked to dynamic message signs (DMS), CCTV and vehicle detector stations (VDS), traffic intersections, as well as environment road weather sensor stations.
  • Philips CityTouch brings street lighting into focus
    December 20, 2016
    As far as 99% of any city’s population is concerned, street lights are just, well, there. But big changes are taking place, as explained by lighting systems provider Philips Lighting. Street lighting has been with us for more than a century. With the exception of the early 20th century switchover from gas to electricity and the recent most important invention of LEDs, there have been few obvious changes.