Skip to main content

Yunex Traffic management for Hamburg

More than 150,000 vehicles pass along the A7 in Hamburg, Germany, every day – increasing regularly. To ensure continued safety on the route, highway operator Die Autobahn launched an extensive renovation project on the A7. Traffic technology on the city highway will be optimised, digitised and connected in 18 construction phases.
April 28, 2022 Read time: 2 mins

 

Yunex Traffic was commissioned to develop and install the traffic systems, explains Markus Schlitt, chief executive of Yunex Traffic. Central to this is the installation of an intelligent traffic sign bridge, that enables flexible reactions to traffic developments and thus regulates the flow of traffic while enabling maximum safety.

Yunex Traffic installed intelligent sensors along the highway to record traffic and environmental data and forward it to the traffic computer. Equipped with the Yunex Traffic Software Sitraffic Conduct, the computer evaluates the data gathered and forwards corresponding reactions to the traffic sign bridge.

The traffic calculator also receives an update so that it is perfectly aligned with the new signal system. All possible incidents such as accidents, weather changes or increased traffic are then already pre-programmed in the traffic computer. This ensures continuous tunnel operation.

The traffic sign bridge lays the foundation for the next milestone in the expansion of the A7 - expansion to eight lanes. At the end of 2023, Yunex Traffic will install a 150m-long median transfer system on the A7. The moveable metal barriers allow flexible blocking of individual road sections or tunnel tubes.

Despite disruptions, traffic can be dynamically diverted by the tunnel operator and continue to flow quickly. This ensures that accidents in the tunnel are secured quickly and safely at all times and that there is no danger to other road users.

The new traffic signs also provide another benefit: equipped with new LED technology, they save up to 90% of the energy used to illuminate the signs while the visibility is much higher.

Yunex Traffic is a separately managed company of Siemens Mobility. Its intelligent mobility solutions are used in major cities across the world, including Dubai, London, Berlin, Bogota and Miami.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The Cebu–Cordova Link Expressway
    September 19, 2021
    The 8.5km CCLEx, as it is known, will include the longest and tallest bridge in the Philippines when the structure is finished next year
  • Symology supplies the foundations for Tarmac’s Street Works business
    April 7, 2017
    UK contractor Tarmac has been in partnership with Symology since 2011, using a shared management service for asset management to meet tougher government street work regulations, writes Matt Waite Tarmac, with more than 6,600 employees, is the UK’s leading sustainable building materials and construction solutions business. The company has over 330 UK sites from which it delivers contracting and highways maintenance services as well as products such as aggregates, asphalt, cement, lime and ready-mix concre
  • Contracts are about to be signed for the Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link
    March 13, 2015
    Nearly eight years after Denmark and Germany agreed to construct a major undersea road and rail tunnel, the first contracts are about to be signed. David Arminas reports. Construction is due to start later this year on one of Europe’s most ambitious, as well as the world’s longest, road and rail tunnels, the 17.6km Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link between Germany and Denmark. Fehmarnbelt is expected to cost around US$7.5 billion and be five times the length of the Øresund tunnel between the Danish capital Copenhagen
  • Contracts are about to be signed for the Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link
    March 13, 2015
    Nearly eight years after Denmark and Germany agreed to construct a major undersea road and rail tunnel, the first contracts are about to be signed. David Arminas reports. Construction is due to start later this year on one of Europe’s most ambitious, as well as the world’s longest, road and rail tunnels, the 17.6km Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link between Germany and Denmark. Fehmarnbelt is expected to cost around US$7.5 billion and be five times the length of the Øresund tunnel between the Danish capital Copenhagen